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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
111

Imperial authorship and eighteenth-century transatlantic literary production

Hardy, Molly O'Hagan, 1977- 24 October 2011 (has links)
My project examines eighteenth-century struggles over literary property and its part in England’s control over its colonies. Debates over literary property set in the context of the larger colonial struggles over ownership help us to understand the relationship between authority and authorship: in the colonies, booksellers and authors worked together to make authority and authorship local, to separate it from England, English constructions of authorship, and the book trade system in London. The figures I analyze––Daniel Defoe, Jonathan Swift, Samuel Johnson, and Mathew Carey––brought new models of print capitalism to the colonies, dispersing an understanding of copyright that was an assertion of local affiliations. In the case of Ireland, these affiliations manifested themselves in a nationalist movement, and in Scotland, in an assertion of equality under the union of Great Britain. In the newly formed United States, the affiliations were among those still struggling for legal recognition after the American Revolution. Using book history in the service of literary analysis, my study is the first devoted to reading the way that liminal figures such as George Faulkner, Alexander Donaldson, Absalom Jones, and Richard Allen have influenced the work of these largely canonical authors, and thus local politics, through their literary production practices. / text
112

THE TWO EIGHTEENTH CENTURIES: THE IMPACT OF DESCARTES ON THE SATIRE OF SWIFT'S 'TALE OF A TUB'

Vallier, Robert Jean, 1928- January 1970 (has links)
No description available.
113

A Computational-based Approach for the Design of Trip Steels

Li, Sheng-Yen 16 December 2013 (has links)
The purpose of this work is to optimize the chemical composition as well as the heat treatment for improving the mechanical performance of the TRIP steel by employing the theoretical models. TRIP steel consists of the microstructure with ferrite, bainite, retained austenite and minor martensite. Austenite contributes directly to the TRIP effect as its transformation to martensite under the external stress. In order to stabilize austenite against the martensitic transformation through the heat treatment, the two-step heat treatment is broadly applied to enrich the carbon and stabilize the austenite. During the first step of the heat treatment, intercritical annealing (IA), a dual phase structure (ferrite+austenite) is achieved. The austenite can be initially stabilized because of the low carbon solubility of ferrite. The bainite isothermal treatment (BIT) leads to the further carbon enrichment of IA-austenite by the formation of carbon-free ferrite. Comparing to the experiments, the thermodynamic and kinetic models are the lower and upper bounds of the carbon content of retained austenite. The mechanical properties are predicted using the swift model based on the predicted microstructure. In this work, a theoretical approach is coupled to a Genetic Algorithm-based optimization procedure to design (1) the heat treated temperatures to maximize the volume fraction of retained austenite in a Fe-0.32C-1.42Mn-1.56Si alloy and the chemical composition of (2) Fe-C-Mn-Si and (3) Fe-C-Mn-Si-Al-Cr-Ni alloy. The results recommend the optimum conditions of chemical composition and the heat treatment for maximizing the TRIP effect. Comparing to the experimental results, this designing strategy can be utilized to explore the potential materials of the novel alloys.
114

(Re-)Writing the End: Apocalyptic Narratives in the Postmodern Novel

Humphreys, Christopher John January 2011 (has links)
This thesis investigates the relationship between the apocalyptic narrative and the postmodern novel. It explores and builds on Patricia Waugh‟s hypothesis in Practising Postmodernism: Reading Modernism (1992) which suggests that that the postmodern is characterised by an apocalyptic sense of crisis, and argues that there is in fact a strong relationship between the apocalyptic and the postmodern. It does so through an exploration of apocalyptic narratives and themes in five postmodern novels. It also draws on additional supporting material which includes literary and cultural theory and criticism, as well as historical theory. In using the novel as a medium through which to explore apocalyptic narratives, this thesis both assumes and affirms the novel‟s importance as a cultural artefact which reflects the concerns of the age in which it is written. I suggest that each of the novels discussed in this thesis demonstrates the close relationship between the apocalyptic and the postmodern through society‟s concern over the direction of history, the validity of meta-narratives, and other cultural phenomenon, such as war, the development of nuclear weaponry, and terrorism. Although the scope of this thesis is largely confined to the historical-cultural epoch known as postmodernity, it also draws on literature and cultural criticism from earlier periods so as to provide a more comprehensive framework for investigating apocalyptic ideas and their importance inside the postmodern novel. A number of modernist writers are therefore referred to or quoted throughout this thesis, as are other important thinkers from preceding periods whose ideas are especially pertinent. The present thesis was researched and written between March 2010 and August 2011 and is dedicated to all of those people who lost their lives in the apocalyptic events of the February 22nd Christchurch earthquake.
115

The scientific background of Part III of Gulliver's travels /

Cassini, Marc. January 1980 (has links)
No description available.
116

Savage violence technology, civility, and sovereignty in British fiction, 1682-1745 /

Loar, Chris F., January 2007 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--UCLA, 2007. / Vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 354-379).
117

Tradition und Transformation - der fiktionale Dialog mit dem viktorianischen Zeitalter im (post)modernen historischen Roman in Grossbritannien /

Deistler, Petra, January 1999 (has links)
Diss.--Freiburg(Breisgau)--Univ., 1998. / Bibliogr. p. 279-295.
118

Facilitating comprehension of Swift programs

Chernenko, Andrii January 2018 (has links)
Program comprehension is the process of gaining knowledge about software system by extracting it from its source code or observing its behavior at runtime. Often, when documentation is unavailable or missing, this is the only reliable source of knowledge about the system, and the fact that up to 50% of total maintenance effort is spent understanding the system makes it even more important. The source code of large software systems contains thousands, sometimes millions of lines of code, motivating the need for automation, which can be achieved with the help of program comprehension tools. This makes comprehension tools an essential factor in the adoption of new programming languages. This work proposes a way to fill this gap in the ecosystem of Swift, a new, innovative programming language aiming to cover a wide range of applications while being safe, expressive, and performant. The proposed solution is to bridge the gap between Swift and VizzAnalyzer, a program analysis framework featuring a range of analyses and visualizations, as well as modular architecture which makes adding new analyses and visualizations easier. The idea is to define a formal model for representing Swift programs and mapping it to the common program model used by VizzAnalyzer as the basis for analyses and visualizations. In addition to that, this paper discusses the differences between Swift and programming languages which are already supported by VizzAnalyzer, as well as practical aspects of extracting the models of Swift programs from their source code.
119

A Targeted LIGO-Virgo Search for Gravitational Waves Associated with Gamma-Ray Bursts Using Low-Threshold Swift GRB Triggers

Harstad, Emelie 11 July 2013 (has links)
Gamma-ray bursts (GRBs) are short, intense flashes of 0.1-1 MeV electromagnetic radiation that are routinely observed by Earth orbiting satellites. The sources of GRBs are known to be extragalacitic and located at cosmological distances. Due to the extremely high isotropic equivalent energies of GRBs, which are on the order of Eiso~1054 erg, the gamma-ray emission is believed to be collimated, making them observable only when they are directed towards Earth. The favored progenitor models of GRBs are also believed to emit gravitational waves that would be observable by the current generation of ground-based interferometric gravitational wave detectors. The LIGO (Laser Interferometer Gravitational-Wave Observatory) and Virgo instruments operated near design sensitivity and collected more than a year of triple coincident data during the S5/VSR1 science run, which spanned the two year interval between November 2005 and October 2007. During this time, GRB detections were being made by the NASA/Goddard Swift Burst Alert Telescope at a rate of approximately 0.3 per day, producing a collection of triggers that has since been used in a coincident GRB-GW burst search with data from the LIGO-Virgo interferometer network. This dissertation describes the search for gravitational waves using the times and locations of 123 below-threshold potential GRB triggers from Swift over the same time period. Although most of the below-threshold triggers are likely false alarms, there is reason to believe that some are the result of actual faintly-observed GRB events. Recent GRB observations indicate that the local rate of low-luminosity GRBs is much higher than previously believed. This result, combined with the possibility of discovering a rare nearby GRB event accompanied by gravitational waves, is what motivates this search. The analysis results indicate no evidence for gravitational waves associated with any of the below-threshold triggers. A median distance lower limit of ~16 Mpc was derived for a typical neutron star-black hole coalescence progenitor assumption.
120

Comparing performance between react native and natively developed smartphone applications in swift : A comparative analysis and evaluation of the React Native framework

Bilberg, Dennis January 2018 (has links)
In today's society, smartphones are so widely established that corporations have even changed their cooperate culture when it comes to bringing your own personal device to work. Sales graphs prove that smartphones are more established today than ever before, which creates pressure for companies big, as small to extend and provide their services from the pocket of the user in the form of a smartphone mobile application. This paper focuses on the development of smartphone applications. Looking into the native development way for iOS and the code fragmentation that characterizes the long and costly development in order to provide the application on the big mobile operating systems by evaluating the cross-platform solution React Native that bypasses the fragmentation. 
 The experiment presents the collected data and its solutions, with an evaluation of the React Native framework. Finally, thoughts and future work to further extend the category is presented.

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