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Mapping poetry onto the visual arts : Carl Andre's WordsMurray, Caitlin Collins 19 March 2014 (has links)
As innovative as his sculpture, Andre's visually oriented poetry, however, has yet to receive the same rigor of attention as his sculpture. His inventive use of poetic and visual form, which he described as poetry mapped onto the visual arts, provides a compelling example of the interrelationship of word and image, a practice, although often overlooked, that suffuses twentieth-century visual art and poetry. Whereas Andre produced approximately 1,500 poems over many decades, this project focuses on his Words installation, the largest permanently installed collection of Andre's poems in the world. In 1995, Andre gifted 465 pages of poetry to the Chinati Foundation in Marfa, Texas. Andre's experiments with genre, including lyrics, autobiographies, novels, odes, and operas, push literary convention to the edge of irreconcilability. Despite the array of genres, I argue that all of the disparate kinds of writing found in Words demonstrate Andre's poetic sensibility. Until recently the critical discussion of Andre's poems proceeded as a one-sided discourse, which advanced the notion that this large body of work was best suited to enhancing the understanding of Andre's sculptural practice. To redress the one-sidedness of the discourse requires approaching Andre not only as a sculptor who made poems, but also as a poet deeply engaged in the visual qualities of his poetics. Engaging the spirit of the "make it new" sensibility of modernist poetics, Andre developed his own practice by "mapping language on the conventions and usages of 20thcentury abstract art."¹ Andre's poetry operates in the space between art and language. In this space we find Andre's engagement with poetic history, particularly the innovations of Ezra Pound, his relationship to important poetic developments such as fragmentation and quotation, and his experimentation with poetry as a visual medium. An examination of Andre's poetic oeuvre, the publication and exhibition history of his poems, and the manner of critical attention given to the poems from the 1960s onward contextualizes Andre's practice of mapping poetry onto the visual arts, while also bridging the gap in discourse between the fields of art and poetry. / text
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Cultural criticism in women's experimental writing the poetry of Rosmarie Waldrop, Lyn Hejinian and Susan HoweFreitag, Kornelia January 2001 (has links)
Zugl.: Potsdam, Univ., Habil.-Schr., 2001 u.d.T.: Freitag, Kornelia: Cultural criticism in contemporary women's experimental writing in the U.S.A.
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The solo vocal repertoire of Mary Carlisle Howe with stylistic and interpretive analyses of selected works /McClain, Sandra Clemmons. January 1992 (has links)
Thesis (Ed.D.)--Teachers College, Columbia University, 1992. / Typescript; issued also on microfilm. Sponsor: Jan Eric Douglas. Dissertation Committee: Harold F. Abeles. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 215-217).
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The social imagination of American poetry, 1970-2000 /Rathmann, Andrew John. January 2000 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--University of Chicago, Deparment of English Language and Literature, August 2000. / Includes bibliographical references. Also available on the Internet.
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Cathedrals and change in the twentieth century : aspects of the life of the cathedrals of the Church of England with special reference to the Cathedral Commissions of 1925, 1958, 1992Turner, Garth January 2011 (has links)
Four commissions considered cathedrals during the nineteenth century. The first two gave them their modern structure: a dean, a small number of stipendiary, residentiary, canons, a larger honorary body. But the principal achievement of these commissions was negative; their emphasis was on the removal of wealth. The second two sought to give new corporate and diocesan life to these ancient bodies. Their aspirations, however, never achieved parliamentary enactment. Thus in the early twentieth century there was will for the reform; the establishment of the Church Assembly presented more auspicious circumstances in which to attempt it. The thesis falls into two related parts. The first traces institutional change across the twentieth-century - change which can be measured by the statutory outcome of the proposals of the three commissions which sat during the century. It will be argued that all three were clearly products of their times, showing the influence of context: of social (and technological) change and of the mind-set of the Church: the first two, reflecting that Church, were conservative and respectful of inheritance and tradition. The last, in an age socially, politically, administratively, ecclesiastically, much changed, was radical. It showed less respect for tradition and a greater susceptibility to external factors: markedly to contemporary management theory. Constitutions regulate a life. The second part explores aspects of that life. All the aspects reviewed helped to form, and were in turn re-formed by, the Commissions and the consequent Measures. First among the subjects examined is the fundamental, defining, relationship, that with the bishop and the diocese. Other chapters discuss the force of external, social, change in shaping and moulding the work and witness of cathedrals, and their methods and standards of pastoral care. The ecumenical movement, though scarcely noticed by the first Commission, was already a factor in the work of a few cathedrals. The 1990s commission assumed, and its Measure provided for, ecumenical involvement. The first commission noted the fact of dissension within cathedrals and between them and their bishops; such troubles were the immediate cause of the last commission; the final chapter examines publicly prominent episodes of dissension. Throughout the century, in their witness the cathedrals responded, sometimes profoundly, to a context of change; their historic constitutions and the independence they conferred enabled the cathedrals to conduct a richly varied public ministry The, frequently decisive, force of personalities, especially of deans and provosts, in producing that ministry, is emphasised. The progress of the parish church cathedrals from, early in the century, scant institutional life to, by its end, parity with their ancient counterparts, is traced. The main text is supported by appendices, including two respectively providing biographical notes on those mentioned in the text, and definitions of specialist terms.
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Mathematical model of primary food web energetics in Howe Sound, British ColumbiaBuchanan, Douglas Bruce January 1976 (has links)
Same of the philosophical aspects of modelling are discussed along with the importance of understanding primary marine food-web components. Howe Sound, a coastal embayment on the British Columbia coast, is examined as a base study area, and field sampling methods as well as laboratory techniques are summarized. The main body of the investigation involves the development of a mathematical description of phytoplankton population growth and distribution as a function of biological and physical circulation parameters in the sound. This is accomplished by dividing the sound into zones and modelling primary productivity as a result of certain key environmental forcing functions. Transport between zones is shown to affect spatial timing and distribution.
Observed and predicted values of nutrients, temperature, extinction
coefficients, zooplankton biomass, and phytoplankton productivity and
biomass are compared as the model is refined. It is then used to simulate
the effects of a delayed spring on productivity in Howe Sound, as well as
to model growth in Indian /Arm, an adjacent embayment.
Simulated annual productivity in Have Sound is 235, 316 and 384
gC‧m⁻²‧yr⁻¹ in the down inlet direction for the three model zones. With
a delayed spring the values are reduced to 200, 308 and gC‧m⁻²‧yr⁻¹
and comparisons are made with observed data in Howe Sound in 1974 when
poor spring weather conditions prevailed. In Indian Arm the model predicts
a spatial productivity distribution of 318, 256 and 239 gC‧m⁻²‧yr⁻¹, values which agree with field observations of two workers. The general applicability of such models to complex ecosystems is discussed. / Science, Faculty of / Zoology, Department of / Graduate
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Sedimentological advances concerning the flocculation and zooplankton pelletization of suspended sediment in Howe Sound, British Columbia : a fjord receiving glacial meltwaterSyvitski, James P. M. January 1978 (has links)
The study of suspended sediment provides insights into the transport and accumulation of sediment in depositional basins. Past investigations have suffered, however, from a lack of methodology that can deal with the low concentrations of suspended sediment. The theory and method of three techniques to be used in the analysis of suspended sediment have been outlined.
1) VSA, provides a rapid, accurate and precise method of determining grain size distributions of low weight samples. The method is based on the solution to a set of equations that discretely define the increasing volume of a homogeneous sediment sample settling in an enclosed volume of water. The results are in terms of sedimentation diameters, a hydrodynamically sensitive property. 2) The Ag filter mount provides a fast technique for a low sample weight random oriented mount to be used in quantitative XRD analysis. The method has excellent precision and does not fractionate the mineral component due to their settling velocity. 3) Suspended sediment collectors have been used to measure the downward flux of sediment in the fjord environment. The traps have also provided a means to calculate the natural settling velocity of flocculated or otherwise enhanced particle settlement.
Laboratory and field studies have dealt with the interaction of zooplankton with suspended sediment. Marine zooplankton ingest suspended sediment at a rate dependent on sediment concentration and mineralogy. Ingested mineral particles undergo chemical and mineral transformations which are functions of mineralogy, cation exchange capacity and residence
time in the digestive tract. Zooplankton fecal pellets have a much larger settling velocity than their component particles. This increased settling rate allows clay to be deposited where the hydrodynamic nature of the environment would only allow coarse silt to fine sand deposition.
Glacial flour (feldspar, quartz, trioctahedral mica, chlorite, amphibole, tourmaline, and vermiculite) enters the surface-layer of the Howe Sound fjord as a sediment plume which moves quickly down inlet while slowly mixing with the marine water. Although flocculation occurs in the lower brackish water of the surface-layer, mixing and diffusion are the dominant means for sediment to enter the lower-marine-water. Once in the lower-marine-water, zooplankton pelletization and biologic agglomeration of inorganic floccules takes place. These processes that enhance the individual particle settlement, generate a fast response time between the surface-layer and the lower-marine-layer in terms of sedimentation of particulate matter. Settling velocities of particles less than 1 μm have been enhanced over 1400 times.
Size distributions of sediment deposited on the sea-bed are a function
of variable multimodal and/or non log-normal size distributions from sub-laminae falling through the water column. The increase in deviation away from log-normality down inlet, for size distributions of both suspended
and deposited sediment, is an artifact of the size analytical method. / Science, Faculty of / Earth, Ocean and Atmospheric Sciences, Department of / Graduate
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On certain results on the local gamma factors for the symplectic and unitary groupsZhang, Qing 15 December 2016 (has links)
No description available.
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The civic revival in Ohio: the fight against privilege in Cleveland and Toledo, 1899-1912Bremner, Robert Hamlett January 1943 (has links)
No description available.
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The causes for the disaffection of the Loyalists in New York CityDevine, Michael J. January 1968 (has links)
No description available.
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