1 |
Rhetorical mapping of technological psychosis A Burkean reading of William Gibson's "Neuromancer" (Kenneth Burke).Beard, James E. Unknown Date (has links)
Thesis (Ph.D.)--Northwestern University, 1999. / Source: Dissertation Abstracts International, Volume: 60-12, Section: A, page: 4408. Adviser: Thomas B. Farrell.
|
2 |
"Plagues of the new world order" : technology and political alternatives in William Gibson's Neuromancer /Griffin, Brent, January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
Thesis (M.A.) in English--University of Maine, 2006. / Includes vita. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 86-88).
|
3 |
The effects of two perceptual sets upon the subsequent perception of pictures : an application of the perceptual theories of James and Eleanor Gibson and Jerome Bruner /Sharer, Jon W. January 1975 (has links)
No description available.
|
4 |
Lost in space? : readers' constructions of science fiction worldsKneale, James Robert January 1996 (has links)
No description available.
|
5 |
I am an island to myself : how one veteran English teacher's beliefs, experience, and philosophy translate into classroom practice /Bruhn, Tara Jenkins. January 2005 (has links)
Thesis (Ph. D.)--Georgia State University, 2005. / Typescript. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 207-219). Also available via the World Wide Web.
|
6 |
Disenchanting Japan: Japanese Futurity in Neuromancer and the Science Fiction of Masaki GoroGarza, James Michael January 2010 (has links)
I apply enchantment theory to William Gibson's Neuromancer and several works by the Japanese SF author Masaki Goro to reveal shared assumptions about Japan as the locus of an emergent techno-social hybridity. Both Gibson and Masaki register signs of widespread disenchantment stemming from an increasingly technologically advanced society with a ruthlessly efficient take on capitalism. However, they mobilize their portrayals to different ends. I demonstrate that the authors diverge in their assessments of a technologically-mediated reenchantment. I also argue that the authors' use of conventions from hard-boiled fiction performs several functions. First, it ironically highlights the impossibility of nostalgia in such a future world, where the concept of home is divested of stability. Second, it evinces an anxiety over the transition from individualistic subjectivity to decentered posthumanity. Third, it reinforces the theme of the supplantation of the traditional nation-state by hyper-capitalist forms.
|
7 |
Thomas Hardy, John Masefield, and Wilfrid Wilson Gibson as poetic interpreters of lifeWilliams, Rose Mary Urner. January 1923 (has links)
Thesis (M.A. in English)--University of California, Berkeley, May 1923. / Includes bibliographical references (leaves vii-xi).
|
8 |
"Plagues of the New World Order": Technology and Political Alternatives in William Gibson's NeuromancerGriffin, Brent January 2006 (has links) (PDF)
No description available.
|
9 |
A historical-ethnographic account of a Canadian woman in sport, 1920-1938 : the story of Margaret (Bell) GibsonLaubman, Katherine M. January 1991 (has links)
This study attempted to discover and describe the cultural knowledge and understandings that Margaret (Bell) Gibson derived from her performance as a highly successful athlete in Canadian women's sport during the 1920s - 1930s. A case study approach was used that employed qualitative research strategies. This approach was considered appropriate as prominent issues in women's lives are subtle and context-bound.
A series of five informal interviews was conducted with Bell, using an ethnographic approach developed by Spradley (1979). Each interview was recorded and transcribed into text. The text was then validated by Bell, prior to analysis by the researcher. An inductive-reflexive analysis of the text was employed, as much of the information emerged as Bell recalled her experiences in sport. This involved the use of an evolving methodology, which identified classifications of knowledge and structures of thought as they were revealed. Bell's narrative was contextually-grounded in a review of Canadian history from 1920 to 1938, as this seemed to connect Bell's experience as a sportswoman to the broader socio-historical milieu. Findings were substantiated through a process of triangulated inquiry wherein verification was sought from newspaper clippings, official records, and historical documents.
The analysis of Bell's narrative revealed a complex system of knowledge based on categories of information related to the structure of sport, social network, jumping, cultural activities, concepts of space and timing, and role definition. Documentation of the major sporting events Bell experienced, as an athlete, was also recorded. Implications for future research were discussed. / Education, Faculty of / Curriculum and Pedagogy (EDCP), Department of / Graduate
|
10 |
Detailed subsurface geology and potential petroleum production of the Waltersburg sandstone (Chester Series, upper Mississippian) in southwest Gibson County, IndianaJohnston, David Kent 03 June 2011 (has links)
The Waltersburg sandstone produces oil from isolated sand bodies and has produced nearly eight million barrels of oil from those of the Rochester, Mounts, and Fleener Fields. From the overlying "little Menard" Limestone to the Vienna Limestone below, the Waltersburg interval is most commonly 70 feet thick, but ranges from 14 feet in the north to 116 feet in the south. Increasing interval thickness is strongly correlated with increasing sand percentage. The maximum sand accumulation occurs in elongate sand bodies up to 100 feet thick,one-fourth to one mile wide, and two to five miles long. Elongate sand bodies are commonly oriented northeast-southwest, nearly perpendicular to strike. Sheet sand bodies are less than half as thick and usually produce only from small structural highs.Structure contour maps of the Vienna and "little Msnard" Limestones show that a 16 square mile plunging anticline bearing N30E exists along with other minor folds on a regional slope dipping about 40 feet per mile into the Illinois Basin. The structure of the "little Menard" may be associated with structural features of the Vienna, with isolated thick sand bodies or both where they occur together. Structural features of the "little Menard" that are not seen on the Vienna are usually attributed to differential compaction over sand bodies. The overall similarity in folding of both limestones suggests that deformation occurred after Waltersburg deposition as a result of differential compaction over older sediments combined with regional tilting as sediments subsided into the Illinois Basin.Oil production occurs in sands 10 to 60 feet thick that are structurally high. Structural elevation is therefore more important to production than sand thickness. Since most structural traps have been exploited, the most favorable locations for potential production are where thick elongate sands thin up-dip to form stratigraphic traps. Although a few locations for possible stratigraphic traps exist within the study area, extending exploration in recommended places may lead to more promising production outside the study area.On the basis of petrography, subsurface geometry, and log signatures of the Waltersburg sandstone, the depositional environment is suggested as being a fluvial dominated delta plain facies. The various types of thick elongate sand bodies are attributed to fluvial distributary channels. The interdistributary area is represented by mostly shale and silt, with crevasse-splay sands and possible minor mouth bar/crevasse-splay couplets.
|
Page generated in 0.0397 seconds