Your email was sent successfully. Check your inbox.

An error occurred while sending the email. Please try again.

Proceed reservation?

Export
Filter
Type of Medium
Region
Virtual Catalogues
Access
  • 1
    UID:
    almahu_9949758806902882
    Format: 1 online resource (480 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9781350333307
    Series Statement: Bloomsbury Studies in Classical Reception
    Content: 〈b〉Through an extensive series of extracts and accompanying interpretative and contextual essays, this volume 〈/b〉〈b〉showcases the expertise in classical learning that flourished in medieval Gaelic Ireland.〈/b〉 Providing translations of all excerpts, it situates better known 'antiquity sagas' in the Middle Irish language, such as 〈i〉Togail Troí 〈/i〉(〈i〉The Siege of Troy〈/i〉, based on Dares Phrygius), 〈i〉Imtheachta Aeniasa〈/i〉 (〈i〉The Wanderings of Aeneas〈/i〉, based on Virgil's 〈i〉Aeneid〈/i〉), 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉(〈i〉The Civil War〈/i〉, based on Lucan) and 〈i〉Togail na Tebe 〈/i〉(〈i〉The Siege of Thebes〈/i〉, based on Statius), within the broader constellation of medieval Irish literature that references and engages with classical antiquity. Included are synchronistic poetry and world chronologies; lesser-known Irish poetry and prose recounting episodes from Graeco-Roman mythography and featuring, for instance, Jason and the Argonauts, Ulysses and Penelope, Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, Daedalus and the Minotaur; linguistic and metaphysical tracts; place-name lore; and medieval historiographies of Alexander the Great, Hercules, and warriors of Irish legend recast as classical heroes. Creating access to this body of texts and revealing the marked influences of classical concepts on the imaginative resources of medieval Ireland fills a conspicuous lacuna in our knowledge of classical reception in European literatures. The ebook editions of this book are available open access under a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 licence on www.bloomsburycollections.com. Open access was funded by the European Research Council, grant no. 818366.
    Note: List of Illustrations List of Contributors Acknowledgements A Guide to Editorial Practices for Middle Irish Texts, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 〈b〉 I. INTRODUCTION〈/b〉 1. The Culture of the Book and Classical Learning in the Gaelic Middle Ages, 〈i〉Máire Ní Mhaonaigh (University of Cambridge, UK) and Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 2. The Irish Antiquity Sagas in Context, 〈i〉Ralph O'Connor (University of Aberdeen, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉II. CHRONOLOGY AND CORRELATION〈/b〉 3. The First Fragment of the 〈i〉Annals of Tigernach, 〈/i〉〈i〉Patrick Wadden (Belmont Abbey College, USA)〈/i〉 4. Gilla Cóemáin's 〈i〉Annálad anall uile 〈/i〉'All the annals heretofore...', 〈i〉Peadar Mac Gabhann (Ulster University, UK)〈/i〉 5. Flann Mainistrech's 〈i〉Flaithius Rómán ríge glonn 〈/i〉'The sovereignty of the Romans was a kingship of feats of prowess', 〈i〉Peadar Mac Gabhann (Ulster University, UK)〈/i〉 〈b〉III. THE TROJAN WAR〈/b〉 6. 〈i〉Luid Iasón ina luing lóir〈/i〉 'Jason went in his ample ship', 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 7. 〈i〉Togail Troí〈/i〉 'The Siege of Troy', Recension 1, 〈i〉Brent Miles (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 8. 〈i〉Togail Troí〈/i〉 'The Siege of Troy', Recension 2 from the Book of Leinster, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 9. 〈i〉Togail Troí〈/i〉 'The Siege of Troy', Recension 3, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 10. 〈i〉Don Tres Troí 〈/i〉'On the Third Troy', 〈i〉Brent Miles (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 〈b〉IV. ADAPTATION OF LATIN EPIC〈/b〉 11. 〈i〉Togail na Tebe〈/i〉 'The Siege of Thebes', 〈i〉Mariamne Briggs (Independent Scholar, UK)〈/i〉 12. 〈i〉Riss in Mundtuirc 〈/i〉'The Tale of the Necklace', 〈i〉Brent Miles (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 13. 〈i〉Imtheachta Aeniasa 〈/i〉'The Wanderings of Aeneas', 〈i〉Erich Poppe (University of Marburg, Germany)〈/i〉 14. 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉'The Civil War': The Prologue, 〈i〉Brigid Ehrmantraut (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 15. 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉'The Civil War': Literary Techniques, 〈i〉Maio Nagashima (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 16. 〈i〉In Cath Catharda 〈/i〉'The Civil War': The Influence of Scholia, 〈i〉Cillian O'Hogan (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 〈b〉V. MYTHOGRAPHY AND PSEUDOHISTORY〈/b〉 17. 'How Samson Slew the Gesteda', 〈i〉Brigid Ehrmantraut (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 18. 〈i〉Merugud Uilixis meic Leirtis 〈/i〉'The Wandering of Ulysses son of Laertes', 〈i〉Barbara Hillers (Indiana University, USA)〈/i〉 19. 〈i〉Fingal Chlainne Tanntail 〈/i〉'The Kin-Slaying of the Family of Tantalus', 〈i〉Robert Crampton (Independent Scholar, UK)〈/i〉 20. 〈i〉Sgél in Mínaduir 〈/i〉'The Story of the Minotaur', 〈i〉Barbara Hillers (Indiana University, USA)〈/i〉 21. 〈i〉Scéla Alaxandair 〈/i〉'The Saga of Alexander', 〈i〉Cameron Wachowich (University of Toronto, Canada)〈/i〉 22. 〈i〉Stair Ercuil ocus a Bás〈/i〉 'The History of Hercules and his Death', 〈i〉Gregory R. Darwin (Uppsala University, Sweden)〈/i〉 〈b〉VI. WORLD KNOWLEDGE AND INDIGENOUS TRADITION〈/b〉 23. 〈i〉Auraicept na nÉces〈/i〉 'The Scholars' Primer', 〈i〉Nicolai Egjar Engesland (University of Oslo, Norway)〈/i〉 24. 〈i〉Clann Ollaman uaisle Emna 〈/i〉'The nobles of Emain Macha are Ollam's descendants', 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 25. 〈i〉Cogadh Gáedhel re Gallaibh 〈/i〉'The War of the Irish against the Foreigners', 〈i〉Máire Ní Mhaonaigh (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 26. 〈i〉Lebor Gabála Érenn 〈/i〉'The Book of Invasions of Ireland', 〈i〉John Carey (University College Cork, Ireland)〈/i〉 27. 〈i〉Dindshenchas Érend 〈/i〉'Knowledge of Ireland's Notable Places': The River Boyne, 〈i〉Máire Ní Mhaonaigh (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 28. 〈i〉Dindshenchas Érend 〈/i〉'Knowledge of Ireland's Notable Places': The Origins of Tara, 〈i〉Marie-Luise Theuerkauf (University of Cambridge, UK)〈/i〉 29. 〈i〉Suidiugud Tellaig Temra 〈/i〉'The Establishment of Tara's Dominion', 〈i〉Daniel Watson (Dublin Institute of Advanced Studies)〈/i〉 30. 〈i〉Scéla na Esérgi〈/i〉 'Treatise on the Resurrection', 〈i〉Elizabeth Boyle (National University of Ireland Maynooth, Ireland)〈/i〉 〈b〉VII. EPILOGUE〈/b〉 31. Classical Reception and Medieval Irish Texts, 〈i〉Isabelle Torrance (Aarhus University, Denmark)〈/i〉 32. Table of the Principal Manuscript Sources Used, 〈i〉Michael Clarke (University of Galway, Ireland)〈/i〉 〈i〉 〈/i〉Notes Bibliography Index 〈u〉 〈/u〉
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9781350333277
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    URL: Volltext  (kostenfrei)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 2
    UID:
    almafu_9961577010302883
    Format: 1 online resource (375 pages)
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 9783839472422
    Series Statement: Digitale Gesellschaft Series
    Content: How do digital media technologies affect society and our lives? Through the cultural theory hypotheses of hyper-modernism, hyperreality, and posthumanism, Alan N. Shapiro investigates the social impact of Virtual/Augmented Reality, AI, social media platforms, robots, and the Brain-Computer Interface. His examination of concepts of Jean Baudrillard and Katherine Hayles, as well as films such as Blade Runner 2049, Ghost in the Shell, Ex Machina, and the TV series Black Mirror, suggests that the boundary between science fiction narratives and the »real world« has become indistinct. Science-fictional thinking should be advanced as a principal mode of knowledge for grasping the world and digitalization.
    Note: Cover -- Contents -- Acknowledgements -- Introduction -- The Three Central Hypotheses -- The Logical Progression of the Three Concepts or Hypotheses -- Part One - Hyper‐Modernism: Digital Media Technologies and Science Fiction -- Part One to Part Two: From Hyper‐Modernism to Hyperreality -- Part Two - Hyperreality: Reevaluation of Jean Baudrillard's Media Theory and the Simulacrum -- Part Two to Part Three: From Hyperreality to Post‐Humanism and Creative Coding -- Part Three - Posthumanism: N. Katherine Hayles' History of Cybernetics, Creative Coding, and the Future of Informatics -- Originally Published Versions -- Methodology -- Thirty Minute Statement at my Ph.D. Oral Defense Alan N. Shapiro, April 12, 2024 -- Part One - Hyper‐Modernism: Digital Media Technologies and Science Fiction -- Overview of Part One -- Short Definitions of Modernity, Postmodernism, and Hyper‐Modernism -- The Three Essays of Part One -- Mobility and Science Fiction -- Introduction -- We Do Not Live in a Society Where Mobility is Encouraged -- The Dream of the Tomorrow‐Car -- Henri Matisse Paints "the Vision Machine" -- The New Vision Machine -- Close Encounters of the Third Kind: The Menace of Verticality -- The "Spinner" Flying Cars of Blade Runner: Simulation and Surveillance -- Blade Runner: We Are All Replicants -- Blade Runner 2049: Android Liberation Between Old and New Informatic Power -- Minority Report: The Utopia/Dystopia of Surveillance Technologies -- The Fifth Element: When Manhattan has no More Ways to Expand -- Back to the Future: A Speed So Fast that the Laws of Spacetime Get Shattered -- Total Recall: You're in a Johnny Cab -- Robots Versus Androids -- Self‐Owning Cars -- Enhance the Physical World -- The Simulacra, Do Androids Dream of Electric Sheep?, and Dr. Bloodmoney -- The "Science Fiction World" of Philip K. Dick's Ubik. , Who Is Jory Miller and What is Ubik? -- Fredric Jameson on Postmodernism -- Sonja Yeh on the Postmodern Media Theorists -- Donna J. Haraway's "A Manifesto for Cyborgs" -- Science Fiction Heterotopia: The Economy of the Future -- Introduction: Foucault's Heterotopia -- The Technologizing of Memory -- Black Mirror: "The Entire History of You" - Scenes from a Marriage -- Similar Technologies in the Real World Today -- Brain‐Computer Interface -- Designing the Brain‐Computer Interface -- Hyper‐Modernist Literature -- The Economy of the Future -- Post‐Capitalism and Technological Anarchism -- Star Trek Replicators and Star Trek Economics -- Ecologically Aware or Sustainable 3D Printers -- Additive Manufacturing and Living Organisms -- Andre Gorz: Human Liberation Beyond Work -- Murray Bookchin, Post‐Scarcity Anarchism -- Yanis Varoufakis' Vision of Post‐Capitalism -- Conclusion -- Geert Lovink on Post‐Capitalism -- Blockchain Decentralized Idealism -- Smart Contracts -- Between Law and Code -- Decentralized Autonomous Organization -- Between Corporate Intellectual Property Rights and the Rights of Users -- Fiction and Power in Postmodernism -- Cornelius Castoriadis, The Imaginary Institution of Society -- Donna J. Haraway on the Informatics of Domination -- Michel Foucault's Analytics of Power -- Jean Baudrillard, Forget Foucault -- Gilles Deleuze, "Postscript on the Societies of Control" -- Fiction, Power, and Codes in Hyper‐Modernism -- John Armitage on Hyper‐Modernism -- Albert Borgmann on Hyper‐Modernism -- Gilles Lipovetsky on Hyper‐Modernism -- What is Hyper‐Modernism? -- Introduction -- Access to History -- The Carnivalesque -- Modernity, Postmodernism, Hyper‐Modernism -- Gustave Flaubert: To Write a Novel About Nothing -- Hyper‐Modernist Creativity -- Body, Self, and Code in Hyper‐Modernism -- Sincerity and Authenticity. , Darko Suvin on Science Fiction Studies -- Carl Freedman on Science Fiction Studies -- Istvan Ciscsery‐Ronay, Jr. on Science Fiction Studies -- Part Two - Hyperreality: Reevaluation of Jean Baudrillard's Media Theory and the Simulacrum -- Overview of Part Two -- Defining the Simulacrum and Hyperreality -- Thinking Hyperreality: From Rhetoric to Code -- Baudrillard's Importance for the Future -- Baudrillard and the Situationists -- Baudrillard and Trump -- Baudrillard's Importance for the Future -- The Controversy Around Baudrillard -- Yes - Everything is Simulation! -- Early Baudrillard: The Consumer Society and For a Critique of the Political Economy of the Sign -- Symbolic Exchange and the Gift Economy -- The First Order of Simulacra: The Student of Prague -- The Second Order of Simulacra: The First Industrial Revolution -- The Third Order of Simulacra: Simulation and Hyperreality -- First‐Wave Digitalization as Interactive Performance -- The Fourth Order of Simulacra: Value Radiates in All Directions -- From Descartes to Baudrillard: The "Evil Demon" of Images -- Arthur C. Clarke, "The Nine Billion Names of God" -- The Trapdoor Escape Hatch Way Out of Hyperreality -- High Life: The Black Hole of Humanity's Extinction and New Hope -- Poetic Resolution in Baudrillard's Thought -- Daniel Boorstin, The Image: Hyperreality Overtakes America -- Umberto Eco, Travels in Hyperreality -- Roland Barthes, Mythologies -- Taking the Side of Objects -- Plato and the Simulacrum -- Plato as Software Designer -- Brian Gogan on Plato, Baudrillard, and Rhetoric -- Deleuze on "Plato and the Simulacrum" -- Upgrading Hyperreality and the Simulacrum for Digitalization -- Personalized Advertising -- Transdisciplinarity is Good for (Post‑)Humanity -- Virtual Reality, Augmented Reality, and the Metaverse -- Baudrillard and the Situationists -- Introduction. , "Taking the Side of Objects" and the Situationists -- Baudrillard's Paradigm Shift -- Is Baudrillard Fair to the Situationists? -- "Baudrillard and the Situationists" Commentators Douglas Kellner and Sadie Plant, and the Tension between Critical Theory and Fatal Theory -- Exhibit A (Baudrillard self‐simplifies): -- Exhibit B (Baudrillard's critique of the Situationists is reductionist): -- Exhibit C (Sadie Plant's critique of Baudrillard is reductionist): -- Situationist Practices -- Wandering or the Drift - Le Dérive -- Psycho‐Geography -- The Diverting of Technologies - Le détournement -- The Making or Creating or Construction of Situations -- The Radical Illusion Beyond Art -- Neo‐Situationism in the Field of Advanced Digital Technologies -- Urban and Street Art Activism -- Augmented Reality versus Wall Street -- Conclusion -- McKenzie Wark on the Situationists -- Play Don't Work -- Existential Encounter with the Object -- From the Subject to the Object in Jean‐Paul Sartre's Nausea -- The Myth of Sisyphus: Albert Camus on the Side of Objects -- Simone de Beauvoir, The Ethics of Ambiguity -- Jean Baudrillard and the Donald: Is Trump a Fascist or is He the Parody of Fascism? -- Epistemology of True and False -- Society of the Spectacle and Hyperreality -- Donald Trump the Empty Signifier -- From Simulation to the Grotesque and the Self‐Parody -- Springtime for Hitler -- Serge Latouche Remembers Baudrillard -- Biosphere 2: The Artificial Paradise of Nature -- Reality TV and Baudrillard's Telemorphosis -- The Truman Show: "The Last Thing That I Would Ever Do is Lie to You" -- My Two Key Differences from Baudrillard -- Part Three - Posthumanism: N. Katherine Hayles' History of Cybernetics, Creative Coding, and the Future of Informatics -- Overview of Part Three -- The Science Fiction of Star Trek. , Star Trek's Spock, Data, and Seven of Nine and the Three Orders of Cybernetics -- What is Posthumanism? -- The Concept of Nature in Whitehead and Merleau‐Ponty -- Rosi Braidotti's Celebratory Posthuman Philosophy -- A Fully Posthuman Situation -- Wendy Chun on Software Code -- Software Code as Expanded Narration -- The Software of the Future -- Star Trek: Technologies of Disappearance -- Technoscience and Storytelling -- From Liberal Humanism to Posthumanism -- Cyborg Spock and NASA's Cyborg -- First Order Cybernetics -- How Information Lost Its Body -- Claus Pias on First‐Order Cybernetics -- Gene Roddenberry Designs His First Alien -- "The Devil in the Dark": Empathy for Radical Otherness -- Second Order Cybernetics -- Bernhard Dotzler on Second‐Order Cybernetics -- The Android Data of Star Trek: The Next Generation -- "The Offspring": Data's Daughter Lal -- Third Order Cybernetics -- "Becoming‐Borg" Seven of Nine -- Star Trek: Picard, "Remembrance" -- "Embodied Informatics" is a Science Fiction Idea -- Hayles on Writing and Software Code -- Hyper‐Modernist Science -- I, Robot and the Moral Dilemmas of the Three Laws of Robotics -- The Zeroth Law of Robotics and the Robot Unconscious -- Hayles on the Cognitive Nonconscious -- Marie‐Luise Angerer Critiques Hayles -- Judith Butler and Gender Theory -- Ex Machina and the Turing Test -- Ex Machina: The Performance of Female and Human -- Monique Wittig, The Straight Mind -- Software Code as Expanded Narration -- Software Code as Expressive Media -- Friedrich Kittler: The Numeric Kernel is Decisive -- Kittler's Media Archaeology -- Wolfgang Hagen on Programming Languages -- Ten Paradigms of Informatics and Programming -- The First Hyper‐Modern Computers -- Enter Software Studies -- Enter Creative Coding -- Alan Turing: The Imitation Game and Befriending the Evil Demon. , Alan Turing: The Scientific and Cultural Levels of Computing.
    Additional Edition: ISBN 9783837672428
    Language: English
    Subjects: General works
    RVK:
    Keywords: Electronic books.
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 3
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cham :Springer International Publishing AG,
    UID:
    almahu_9949301204402882
    Format: 1 online resource (197 pages)
    ISBN: 9783030370398
    Note: Intro -- Preface -- Acknowledgements -- Contents -- List of Figures -- Chapter 1: Introduction: Gender, Space, and Affects in Film -- An Inter-disciplinary Approach to Mobility, Space, and Gender on Screen -- Space-Time and Power-Geometries -- Forms, Bodies, and Affects on Screen -- Affective Cinematic Spaces -- Filmic Affects as Affirmative Aesthetics -- Wilfulness and Affirmative Politics -- Book Structure -- References -- Chapter 2: Women's Road Movies and Affirmative Wandering: Messidor -- References -- Chapter 3: Cars: A Micro-analysis of Space and Bodies in Vendredi soir -- Windows, Wandering Camera, and Magical Realism -- A Space of Intimacy: Recollection Objects and Haptic Cinematic Space -- The Car, a Vehicle of (Im)Mobility -- Affirmative Wandering -- Gendered Contacts, Affective Contacts -- Desiring Bodies -- Rewriting Spatial Habitation: A Place Called Home? -- References -- Chapter 4: Houses and Wilful Women: Wadjda -- Wadjda in Context -- In the Streets of Riyadh -- A Passport to Be Mobile -- Bending Lines -- Wilful to Appear Docile -- A Space of One's Own -- Housing Wilfulness -- References -- Chapter 5: Streets: Freedom, Diaspora, and the Erotic in Head-On -- A Rewriting of Space-Time -- Freedom and the Erotic as Power -- Dance and Diaspora -- Punk and Abjection as Affirmative Forms -- Windows, Hotels, and a Space for Pausing -- Domestic Space and Gender Roles -- References -- Chapter 6: Conclusion: Forms of Affirmative Aesthetics -- References -- Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Ceuterick, Maud Affirmative Aesthetics and Wilful Women Cham : Springer International Publishing AG,c2020 ISBN 9783030370381
    Language: English
    Keywords: Electronic books. ; Electronic books ; Electronic books.
    URL: Full-text  ((OIS Credentials Required))
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 4
    UID:
    almafu_9961519195002883
    Format: 1 online resource (xvi, 230 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-4473-6192-X
    Content: How does it feel to be a police officer? Jessica Miller uses the most recent neuroscience and real-life examples to explore risks to individual resilience. A compulsory read for anyone with an interest in policing, the book offers practical resilience techniques and policy recommendations for police officers facing crime in a post-COVID world.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 15 Sep 2022). , Front Cover -- Title page -- Copyright information -- Dedication -- Table of contents -- List of figures and tables -- Glossary -- About the author -- Acknowledgments -- Foreword -- Preface -- 1 Why the need to be resilient? How it feels to be a police officer in the UK and why -- Introduction -- The times we are in -- Changing crimes and changing minds -- What officers and staff tell us themselves -- How neuroscience gives a voice to the policing brain -- What's so different for policing? -- Conclusion -- Chapter 1 snapshot -- Checklist -- 2 Risks to resilience in operational policing -- Introduction -- Crossing the thin blue line -- Survival of the fittest -- States of the policing mind -- Contraction and fragmentation -- Threat perception -- Trauma -- Lack of trust -- Cynicism -- The C-word - and getting tired of it -- Isolation -- Lack of talking -- The body -- Powerlessness or reduced self-efficacy beliefs -- Deferment of happiness -- Who do we think we are? -- Chapter 2 snapshot -- Checklist -- 3 What might be happening in the brain? Introducing simple neuroscience for policing -- Introduction -- Why is understanding the brain so useful? -- What is a brain? -- The basics: your evolutionary brain -- Brain function for police resilience -- Trauma exposure -- The negativity bias -- Talking and not talking -- Modes and zones of thinking in the brain -- Defaulting to police mode -- Seeing red and going green -- Being and doing -- The body-brain connection -- Mirror neurons -- The vagus nerve -- The chemical messengers we could call feelings -- What now? Your turn -- Chapter 3 snapshot -- Checklist -- 4 Turning science into action: resilience practices for policing -- Introduction -- The science is nice, but is this for me? -- So, how do the techniques work? -- Getting started -- Your personal toolkit: PPE for the brain3. , A summary of the techniques -- Techniques -- Daily techniques -- Starting your day -- Morning mindset -- During your day -- Checking in -- Body sweep -- Breathing space -- Eye-gaze expansion -- Tips -- At the end of your day -- Sleep debrief -- Attitude of gratitude -- Little wins and giggles -- Tips -- Mastering threat perception -- Sensing threat but needing to get the better of it? -- 'What's for lunch?' -- F.E.A.R. vs T.H.R.E.A.T -- Fear face-off -- Feeling disproportionately anxious about a harmless interaction? (fear in interpersonal interaction):14 how to imagine life from someone else's disadvantage -- From F-word to C-bomb -- When the day's events are a heavy weight to carry home -- create clear boundaries between job and not-job -- Boots-at-the-door -- Constructing a personal story in your mind about an incident?: acknowledging the discomfort and neutralising the narrative in your head -- Labelling 'there is…' -- Getting creative (bit weird) -- Tips -- Is your body holding tension and it's starting to be uncomfortable?: reset your body, feel accomplished, at ease and present in the here and now -- Shake it out -- Tips -- Feeling your feet -- Tips -- Knowing when to stand down -- Is your stress response lingering and not subsiding after an incident? -- Sit-back-and-sigh -- Tip -- Depersonalising experiences -- Feeling like you're contracting around an experience and getting way too involved? -- 'Not me': regain your agency and independence -- Body boundaries: stand on your own two feet, separate from but present with what is going on -- Sideways shifting: being on an even keel and sensing the broader picture of what is going on around you -- Space-making: spaciousness, sensing the bigger picture and open-mindedness -- Horizon jumping -- The baked bean tin -- Atoms in anatomy. , 'There are narwhals': freedom to think about things other than the immediate (OK, bear with us!) -- Using our bodies to tune in to others -- Not feeling quite in sync with someone?: how to feel more intuitively informed of others' intentions in order to respond -- 'What goes on in vagus, stays in vagus': stimulating the vagus nerve to feel more intuitively informed of others' intentions in order to respond -- 'Mirror, mirror': reading facial expressions to feel more intuitively informed of others' intentions in order to respond -- Tip -- Smart compassion -- When others' distress is just too much to tolerate -- 'Watching the window:' how to gain control over how much to take on -- 'The wishing well': trying to fix something that can't be fixed? -- Tip -- Feeling burned out and invisible? -- The flight mask: resource yourself to stand strong -- Tip -- Getting perspective: putting incidents in their time and place so we can move on -- Mapping -- The satellite -- The drone -- The witness -- Timelines -- Dawn to dusk -- Buzz back and fly forward -- The time traveller -- Tips -- Being objective -- Feeling disproportionately negative about an incident? Take the sting out -- The good, the bad and the boring -- Tip -- Bossing the mind -- For when mind wandering and getting lost in thought kinda hurts: get in command and control of your thoughts -- Spotting the default -- Priming the brain -- Getting your eyes in -- Tactical filtering -- Tip -- Body prep -- 'You got this' -- Obsessing, ruminating or fixating on trying to figure something out? Find a sense of ease with what is, reaffirming what you can do and what you do know -- Befriending 'don't know' -- Permission to lighten up -- Is feeling negativity creeping up on you? Be savvy, intervene and activate your resilience -- RAIN: Recognise, Accept, Investigate and Non-identification -- Tip. , Is a moment of healthy stress taking on a very slight whiff of panic? Learn how to regroup, refocus and resume -- STOP: Stop, Take a breath, Observe, Proceed -- Making a bad thing worse in your mind? Just let something be a bit 'yuk' -- The second punch -- For when there is a flicker of something positive: feel resourced, inspired, confident and grateful, without losing your edge -- HEAL: Have, Enrich, Absorb and Link -- Tip -- Feeling a bit like you're stuck in Ground Hog Day? Life a bit same-y? -- The hand swap -- Feeling a bit 'meh'? A bit distant from others? Generate some light relief and a sense of connection with those who 'get you' -- 'S' funny…' -- Tip -- Tip -- Tip -- How to get the most out of the techniques -- Stop overdoing -- Start surveillance -- Get your body on board -- Make time -- Train up -- Karma police -- Chapter 4 snapshot -- Checklist -- 5 What now? The big step change -- What we know about the 'policing brain' -- 'The only thing to fear is fear itself': getting real with threat perception -- Responsibility in forces -- Behavioural change in forces -- Being a human leader -- Being a whole human -- It's happening -- Quick practical wins -- Refresh induction -- Introduce trauma impact monitoring -- Enhance communications -- Widen wellbeing workflow -- Conclusion -- Chapter 5 snapshot -- Checklist -- Epilogue -- Notes -- Index -- Back Cover.
    Additional Edition: Print version: Miller, Jessica K. The Policing Mind Bristol : Policy Press,c2022 ISBN 9781447361909
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 5
    UID:
    b3kat_BV042860735
    Format: 1 Online-Ressource (176, 58 p)
    Edition: Online-Ausgabe Chester, Vt Readex, a division of Newsbank, Inc 2004-2007 Includes files in TIFF, GIF and PDF formats with inclusion of keyword searchable text Early American Imprints : Shaw/Shoemaker 1801-1819 (Series II)
    Note: Shaw & Shoemaker, 36798
    Additional Edition: Reproduktion von Matchett, Edward The Baltimore directory and register, for the year 1816 1816
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 6
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9959691105102883
    Format: 1 online resource (xxix, 458 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-316-45231-X , 1-316-45519-X , 1-316-45567-X , 1-316-45615-3 , 1-316-45663-3 , 1-316-45855-5 , 1-316-27588-4
    Content: Schubert's late music has proved pivotal for the development of diverse fields of musical scholarship, from biography and music history to the theory of harmony. This collection addresses current issues in Schubert studies including compositional technique, the topical issue of 'late' style, tonal strategy and form in the composer's instrumental music, and musical readings of the 'postmodern' Schubert. Offering fresh approaches to Schubert's instrumental and vocal works and their reception, this book argues that the music that the composer produced from 1822-8 is central to a paradigm shift in the history of music during the nineteenth century. The contributors provide a timely reassessment of Schubert's legacy, assembling a portrait of the composer that is very different from the sentimental Schubert permeating nineteenth-century culture and the postmodern Schubert of more recent literature.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 05 Apr 2016). , Cover; Half title; Title; Copyright; Dedication; Contents; List of figures; List of music examples; List of tables; Notes on contributors; Acknowledgements; Introduction: Schubert's late style and current musical scholarship; Part I Reception histories; Part II The late instrumental music (1): hermeneutics and performance; Part III The late instrumental music (2): meaning and genre; Part IV Defining late style; Select bibliography; Index; 1 'Classical' music and Viennese resistance to Schubert's Beethoven project; 2 Beethoven, Schubert and the movement of phenomena , 3 [Un]Himmlische Länge: editorial intervention as reception history4 Citation, narrative and meaning: Woody Allen and the late Schubert; 5 Schubert's alchemy: transformative surfaces, transfiguring depths; 6 Against the grain: the Sonata in G (D. 894) and a hermeneutics of late style; 7 Schubert's Wiegenlied: the Andante sostenuto from the Piano Sonata in Bb, D. 960; 8 Schubert's reconciliation of gothic and classical influences; 9 The first movement of Schubert's Piano Sonata D. 959 and the performance of analysis , 10 Schubert hearing Don Giovanni: Mozartian death music in the 'Unfinished' Symphony11 Longing for the unattainable: the second movement of the 'Great' C major Symphony; 12 Tonal recollection in Schubert's late instrumental music; 13 Detours, wrong tracks and dead ends: the Wanderer in the labyrinth of Schubert's late instrumental music; 14 Formal ambiguity and generic reinterpretation in the late instrumental music; 15 The 'problem of solitude' and critique in song: Schubert's loneliness; 16 Music of the orphaned self? Schubert and concepts of late style , 17 Bounded finitude and boundless infinitude: Schubert's contradictions at the 'final barrier'18 Invocations of memory in Schubert's last songs; 19 'The prerogative of late style': thoughts on the expressive world of Schubert's late works; 20 Singing against late style: the problem of performance history
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-107-11129-3
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-107-52905-0
    Language: English
    Subjects: Musicology
    RVK:
    RVK:
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 7
    UID:
    almafu_9961033224402883
    Format: 1 online resource (x, 370 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    ISBN: 1-280-76546-1 , 9786610765461 , 1-84615-056-6
    Content: Twenty-nine studies of courtly literature from six different traditions in four languages. The essays presented here study the different linguistic and literary traditions of courtly literature, across four languages, using a wide range of approaches and taking a number of different perspectives; they reflect both current preoccupations in scholarship and perennial concerns, and use both traditional and new methodologies to study a variety of texts. Topics covered include ideologies of love and courtliness; women's voices and roles; incest and identity; poetics; historical approaches; and adaptations and transformations. First delivered at the 1998 meeting of the International Courtly Literature Society at Vancouver, the articles demonstrate the vitality of the field andoffer fresh new insights into the tradition of courtly literature as a whole.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 31 Mar 2023). , CONTENTS; PREFACE; I. THE COURT RECONVENES: PLENARY LECTURES; La réception de la littérature courtoise du XIIe au XIVe siècle en Italie: nouvelles propositions; Literary Uses of Heraldry in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Centuries; The Figure of the King in Medieval German Courtly Literature; Women, Property and the Rise of Courtly Love; Knowledge as Therapy: A Comparison between the Confessio Amantisof Gower and the Breviari d'Amor of Matfre Ermengaud; II. COURTLY LITERATURE ACROSS THE DISCIPLINES: IDEOLOGIES OF LOVE AND COURTLINESS; Felony and Courtly Love , La Chanson des Nibelungen, un monde sans Dieu?"Dieus et amors sont d'un acort": The Theology of Love in the Lai de l'Oiselet; Didactic Strategies in the Ritterspiegel of Johannes Rothe; Lacan, Courtly Love and Anamorphosis; WOMEN'S VOICES, WOMEN'S ROLES; Songs by Women and Women's Songs: How Useful is the Concept of Register?; Complaints of Women, Complaints by Women: Can One Tell Them Apart?; Implications of the Female Poetic Voice in Le Roman de Flamenca; Female enfances: At the Intersection of Romance and Epic; INCEST AND IDENTITY; Questions on the Theme of Incest in Courtly Literature , Incest and Death in Marie de France's Deus AmanzIncest and Identity: Family Relationships in Emaré; POETICS; Approche de la notion de contexte en ancien français; Tracking the Anagram: Preparing a Phonetic Blueprint of Troubadour Poetry; Variations sur l'espace dans le lai du Chaitivel; Perceval's Inner Wanderings: Growing out of Childhood in Chrétien; To Love or Not to Love; HISTORICAL APPROACHES; Prefigurations of Courtliness in the Bayeux Tapestry; Did John of Earley Write the Histoire de Guillaume le Maréchal?; The Loyal and Disloyal Servants of King John , The Ins and Outs of Court: Guiraut Riquier's Poetics of OstracismEleonora d'Este and the Heroines of Boiardo's Orlando innamorato: Challenging Gender Stereotypes at the Ferrara Court; ADAPTATIONS AND TRANSFORMATIONS; "E fer en cortoisie retorner li villan": Roland in Persia in the Entrée d'Espagne; Les songes animaliers dans le Lancelot en prose: du serpent, du lion et duléopard; Bisclavret to Biclarel via Melion and Bisclaret: The Development of a Misogynous Lai; Embodying the Rose: An Intertextual Reading of Alain Chartier's La BelleDame sans mercy , La Sombra de Petrarca en la Poesía Cancioneril"Höfische Minne" auf der Meistersängerbühne: Zur Dramatisierunghöfischer Liebesromane durch Hans Sachs; APRÉS-PROPOS; ELASTIC: A RECENTLY DISCOVERED THIRTEENTH LAICOMPOSED BY MARIE DE FRANCE* , English
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-85991-797-5
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 8
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almahu_9948609637602882
    Format: 1 online resource (xxvii, 585 pages) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: Second edition.
    ISBN: 9781107295209 (ebook)
    Content: This reader remains the only major new reader of Old English prose and verse in the past forty years. The second edition is extensively revised throughout, with the addition of a new 'Beginning Old English' section for newcomers to the Old English language, along with a new extract from Beowulf. The fifty-seven individual texts include established favourites such as The Battle of Maldon and Wulfstan's Sermon of the Wolf, as well as others not otherwise readily available, such as an extract from Apollonius of Tyre. Modern English glosses for every prose-passage and poem are provided on the same page as the text, along with extensive notes. A succinct reference grammar is appended, along with guides to pronunciation and to grammatical terminology. A comprehensive glossary lists and analyses all the Old English words that occur in the book. Headnotes to each of the six text sections, and to every individual text, establish their literary and historical contexts, and illustrate the rich cultural variety of Anglo-Saxon England. This second edition is an accessible and scholarly introduction to Old English.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 29 May 2018). , Machine generated contents note: Preface; Preface to the second edition; List of abbreviations; Introduction; Beginning Old English; 1. Getting started; 2. Practice sentences; 3. Practice texts; 4. Keys to test sentences and texts; 5. Beginning poetry; The Texts: Part I. Teaching and Learning: 1. In the Schoolroom (from 'lfric's Colloquy); 2. A Personal Miscellany (from 'lfwine's Prayerbook); 3. Medicinal Remedies (from Bald's Leechbook); 4. Learning Latin (from 'lfric's Excerptiones de arte grammatica anglice); 5. A New Beginning (Alfred's 'preface' to his translation of Gregory's Cura pastoralis); 6. The Wagonwheel of Fate (from Alfred's translation of Boethius's De consolatione Philosophiae); Part II. Keeping a Record: 7. Laws of the Anglo-Saxon Kings; 8. England under Attack (from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: annals for 981-93, 995-8 and 1002-3); 9. Bede's Ecclesiastical History of the English People; 10. The Battle of Brunanburh; 11. The Will of 'lfgifu; 12. The Fonthill Letter; Part III. Spreading the Word: 13. After the Flood (from the Old English Hexateuch: Gen 8.6-18 and 9.8-13); 14. The Crucifixion (from the Old English Gospels: Mt 27.11-54); 15. King Alfred's Psalms; 16. A Translator's Problems ('lfric's preface to his translation of Genesis); 17. Satan's Challenge (Genesis B, lines 338-441); 18. The Drowning of Pharaoh's Army (Exodus, lines 447-564); 19. Judith; Part IV. Example and Exhortation: 20. Bede's Death Song; 21. Two Holy Women; 22. A Homily for Easter Sunday (from 'lfric's Sermones catholicae); 23. The Dream of the Rood; 24. On False Gods (Wulfstan's De falsis deis); 25. The Sermon of the Wolf (Wulfstan's Sermo Lupi); 26. The Seafarer; Part V. Telling Tales: 27. Falling in Love (from Apollonius of Tyre); 28. The Trees of the Sun and the Moon (from The Letter of Alexander); 29. Cynewulf and Cyneheard (from the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle: annal for 755); 30. The Battle of Maldon; 31. Beowulf; 32. The Fight at Finnsburh; Part VI. Reflection and Lament: 33. Truth is Trickiest (Maxims II); 34. The Durham Proverbs; 35. Five Anglo-Saxon riddles; 36. Deor; 37. The Ruin; 38. The Wanderer; 39. Wulf and Eadwacer; 40. The Wife's Lament; Manuscripts and textual emendations; The writing and pronunciation of Old English; Reference grammar of Old English; Glossary; Guide to terms; Index.
    Additional Edition: Print version: ISBN 9781107055308
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 9
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Amsterdam, Netherlands ; : Elsevier,
    UID:
    almahu_9949225544602882
    Format: 1 online resource (664 pages)
    ISBN: 0-12-818534-1
    Note: Front Cover -- Ancient Supercontinents and the Paleogeography of Earth -- Copyright Page -- Contents -- List of contributors -- About the editors -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- 1 Precambrian supercontinents and supercycles-an overview -- 1.1 The history of the supercontinent research-the five milestones -- 1.2 The Earth and the solar system -- 1.3 Some tectonic concepts -- 1.4 Precambrian supercontinents and their cyclicity-observational evidence -- 1.5 How to reconstruct Precambrian terranes? -- 1.6 Models of the Precambrian supercontinents-some remarks -- 1.7 Precambrian paleomagnetism and paleogeography: a guideline -- 1.7.1 Target rocks -- 1.7.2 Steps 1 and 2 -- 1.7.3 Steps 3−6 -- 1.7.4 Step 7 -- 1.7.5 Step 8 -- 1.8 Precambrian paleomagnetism applied to paleoreconstructions-an example -- 1.8.1 Example 1: closest approach technique for reconstructions -- 1.8.2 Matching apparent polar wander paths-another technique for reconstructions -- 1.9 Precambrian paleomagnetic databases -- 1.9.1 Precambrian pole distributions -- 1.9.2 Some aspects of Precambrian paleomagnetic data -- 1.10 Global and terrane geological maps for reconstructions -- 1.11 Precambrian supercontinent cycle -- 1.11.1 The Precambrian supercontinents and supercycles -- 1.11.2 Secular evolution trends during the Precambrian -- 1.11.2.1 Proxies of core and mantle -- 1.11.2.2 Proxies of crustal extraction -- 1.11.2.3 Proxies reflecting plate tectonics -- 1.11.2.4 Paleolatitude proxies -- 1.11.2.5 Paleoclimate and other proxies -- 1.11.2.6 Kinematic proxies -- 1.11.3 Are the supercontinents the same, similar, or different? -- 1.11.4 Precambrian events and supercontinent cycle -- 1.12 Conclusions and suggestions for future work -- 1.13 How we proceed in this book -- Acknowledgments -- Appendices -- References. , 2 A mantle dynamics perspective on the drift of cratons and supercontinent formation in Earth's history -- 2.1 Introduction -- 2.2 Methodology -- 2.2.1 Geodynamic modeling -- 2.2.2 Specific model setup -- 2.2.2.1 Continent configuration -- 2.2.3 Continental drift diagnostics -- 2.2.4 Computed evolutions -- 2.3 Results -- 2.3.1 Average mantle structure -- 2.3.2 Temporal changes in surface plate motions and continental drift -- 2.3.3 Geodynamic surface evolutions -- 2.3.3.1 Homogeneous continent-size distribution (case A) -- 2.3.3.2 Heterogeneous continent-size distribution (case B) -- 2.3.3.3 More vigorous mantle flow (case C) -- 2.4 Long-term cooling of the mantle (case D) -- 2.5 Discussion -- 2.5.1 Supercontinent formation scenarios and grouping of continental units -- 2.5.2 Inclination frequency sampling and inferences on the GAD hypothesis -- 2.5.3 Challenges in the comparison to paleomagnetic data -- 2.5.4 Model limitations and future directions -- 2.6 Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 3 Precambrian geomagnetic field-an overview -- 3.1 Introduction -- 3.2 Precambrian geomagnetic field-characteristic features -- 3.3 Inclination frequency analysis -- 3.4 Field reversals -- 3.5 Paleosecular variation -- 3.6 Paleointensity -- 3.7 Continental drift -- 3.8 Results -- 3.9 Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 4 The Precambrian paleogeography of Laurentia -- 4.1 Introduction and broad tectonic history -- 4.1.1 Laurentia's initial formation -- 4.1.2 Protracted Proterozoic accretionary growth followed by collisional orogenesis -- 4.1.3 Neoproterozoic rifting -- 4.1.4 Similarities in Laurentia's Proterozoic and Phanerozoic tectonic histories -- 4.2 Paleomagnetic pole compilation -- 4.3 Differential motion before Laurentia amalgamation -- 4.4 Paleogeography of an assembled Laurentia. , 4.5 Comparing paleogeographic models to the paleomagnetic compilation -- 4.6 Paleoenvironmental constraints on paleolatitude -- 4.7 Evaluating Laurentia's Proterozoic paleogeographic neighbors -- 4.7.1 Paleogeographic connections prior to initial Laurentia assembly -- 4.7.2 Amazonia -- 4.7.3 Australia and East Antarctica -- 4.7.4 Baltica -- 4.7.5 Kalahari -- 4.7.6 North China -- 4.7.7 Siberia -- 4.8 The record implies plate tectonics throughout the Proterozoic -- 4.9 Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- Notes -- Glossary -- References -- 5 The Precambrian drift history and paleogeography of Baltica -- 5.1 Introduction -- 5.2 Geological evolution of Baltica -- 5.2.1 General geological outline for Baltica -- 5.2.2 Geological evolution of Fennoscandia and formation of Baltica -- 5.2.2.1 Geological evolution of the Archean Karelian and Kola cratons of Fennoscandia -- 5.2.2.2 Crustal growth of Fennoscandia-the Svecofennian orogen -- 5.2.3 Geological evolution of Volgo-Sarmatia and formation of Baltica -- 5.2.4 Geological evolution of Baltica -- 5.2.4.1 Baltica within Nuna-different tectonic regimes -- 5.2.4.2 Igneous activity and rifting in Baltica reflecting initiation of the breakup on Nuna? -- 5.2.4.3 Late Mesoproterozoic-Neoproterozoic geological evolution of Baltica-the Rodinia cycle -- 5.3 Material and methods -- 5.3.1 Paleomagnetic poles of Baltica-latitudinal drift history and drift rate -- 5.3.2 Paleoclimatic indicators of Baltica-testing the reconstructed latitudinal drift history -- 5.4 Paleomagnetic evidence for the drift of Baltica -- 5.4.1 Review of the paleomagnetic poles of Baltica -- 5.4.1.1 Archean-Paleoproterozoic poles of subcratons of Baltica -- 5.4.1.2 Late Paleoproterozoic-Neoproterozoic poles for amalgamated Baltica -- 5.4.2 Latitudinal drift of Baltica -- 5.4.2.1 Archean-Paleoproterozoic latitudinal drift and amalgamation of Baltica. , 5.4.2.2 Late Paleoproterozoic-Neoproterozoic latitudinal drift of amalgamated Baltica -- 5.5 Paleoproterozoic-Neoproterozoic climatic indicators for Baltica -- 5.6 Drift velocities of Baltica and its subcratons with implication to tectonics -- 5.6.1 Archean-Paleoproterozoic drift velocities with implication to tectonics -- 5.6.2 Late Paleoproterozoic-Neoproterozoic drift velocities with implication to tectonics -- 5.7 Implications for Baltica in Superia supercraton and Nuna and Rodinia supercontinents -- 5.7.1 Karelian and Kola in Superia -- 5.7.2 Baltica in Nuna and Rodinia cycles -- 5.7.2.1 Baltica-Laurentia-Siberia -- 5.7.2.2 Baltica-Congo-São Francisco -- 5.7.2.3 Baltica-India in Nuna and Rodinia cycles -- 5.7.2.4 Baltica-Amazonia in Nuna and Rodinia cycles -- 5.8 Concluding remarks -- Acknowledgments -- Supplementary table -- References -- 6 The Precambrian drift history and paleogeography of Amazonia -- 6.1 Introduction -- 6.2 The Amazonian Craton -- 6.3 Quality criteria of paleomagnetic poles -- 6.4 Amazonian paleomagnetic data and apparent polar wander path -- 6.4.1 Amazonian latitude drift -- 6.4.2 Amazonian apparent polar wander path and the polarity time scale -- 6.4.3 Amazonia pre-Columbia -- 6.4.4 Amazonia in a long-lived Columbia? -- 6.4.5 Amazonian Craton in the Rodinia supercontinent -- 6.4.6 Amazonian Craton in Gondwana -- 6.5 Final remarks -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 7 The Precambrian drift history and paleogeography of Río de la Plata craton -- 7.1 Introduction -- 7.2 Geology of the Río de la Plata craton -- 7.2.1 Piedra Alta Terrane (PA) -- 7.2.2 Tandilia terrane (T) -- 7.2.3 Nico Perez terrane (NP) and Dom Feliciano Belt (DFB) -- 7.3 Material -- 7.4 Results -- 7.5 Discussion -- 7.5.1 RP and Precambrian continents -- 7.5.2 Paleoclimatic record of RP -- 7.6 Conclusions -- Acknowledgements -- References. , 8 Precambrian paleogeography of Siberia -- 8.1 Introduction -- 8.2 Geology of the Siberian Craton -- 8.3 Paleomagnetic data and paleolatitudes of Siberian Craton -- 8.4 Possible neighbors of Siberian Craton -- 8.5 Conclusion -- Acknowledgments -- References -- 9 Whence Australia: Its Precambrian drift history and paleogeography -- 9.1 Introduction to the Precambrian geology of Australia -- 9.2 Material -- 9.2.1 Paleomagnetic studies -- 9.2.1.1 Archean poles -- Archean Hamersley banded-iron formations and iron ores -- 9.2.1.2 Paleo-Mesoproterozoic -- Kimberley Craton -- Paleo-Mesoproterozoic McArthur Basin/Pine Creek Inlier -- 9.2.1.3 Mesoproterozoic -- Middleback Ranges -- Gawler Craton -- Warakurna large igneous province -- The Albany-Fraser Belt -- 9.2.1.4 Neoproterozoic -- Mundine Dyke Swarm, WA -- Central Australian successions -- Dykes of the Yilgarn Craton, WA -- South Australian successions -- 9.2.2 Data selection -- 9.3 Results: original and age-binned apparent polar wander paths -- 9.3.1 Raw apparent polar wander curve -- 9.3.2 Age-binned APW curve -- 9.4 Discussion -- 9.4.1 Implications for supercontinents -- 9.4.1.1 Australian Cratons in Kenorland (c. 2.77-2.47Ga) -- 9.4.1.2 Australian Cratons in Nuna -- 9.4.1.3 Australian Cratons in Rodinia -- 9.4.2 Neoproterozoic intracontinental rotation -- 9.4.3 Implications for assembly and potential separation events of the Australian cratons -- 9.4.4 Paleoclimate indicators -- 9.4.5 Australian paleolatitudes in a global perspective -- 9.5 Summary -- References -- 10 The Precambrian drift history and paleogeography of India -- 10.1 Introduction -- 10.2 Data selection -- 10.2.1 Southern Indian Block (Dharwar, Bastar, and Singhbhum cratons) -- 10.2.1.1 Dharwar craton results -- 10.2.1.1.1 Bastar craton -- 10.2.1.1.2 Singhbhum craton. , 10.2.2 Northern Indian Block (Aravalli-Delhi-Marwar-Banded Gneiss Complex/Bundelkhand craton).
    Additional Edition: ISBN 0-12-818533-3
    Language: English
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
  • 10
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    New York :Cambridge University Press,
    UID:
    almafu_9960119281202883
    Format: 1 online resource (2 volumes) : , digital, PDF file(s).
    Edition: 1st ed.
    ISBN: 1-316-79571-3
    Content: In this magisterial two-volume book, Pier Luigi Tucci offers a comprehensive examination of one of the key complexes of Ancient Rome, the Temple of Peace. Based on archival research and an architectural survey, his research sheds new light on the medieval, Renaissance, and Baroque transformations of the basilica, and the later restorations of the complex. Volume 1 focuses on the foundation of the complex under Vespasian until its restoration under Septimius Severus and challenges the accepted views about the ancient building. Volume 2 begins with the remodelling of the library hall and the construction of the rotunda complex, and examines the dedication of the Christian Basilica of SS Cosmas and Damian. Of interest to scholars in a range of topics, The Temple of Peace in Rome crosses the boundaries between classics, archaeology, history of architecture, and art history, through Late Antiquity, the Middle Ages, and the early modern period.
    Note: Title from publisher's bibliographic system (viewed on 19 Jan 2018). , Cover -- Half-title page -- Title page -- Copyright page -- Contents -- Preface -- Acknowledgments -- List of Abbreviations -- PART I The Templum Pacis in Context -- Chapter 1 Vespasian's Project -- 1.1 The Historical, Religious, and Urban Context -- 1.2 The Square and the Porticoes -- 1.3 Designing the Templum Pacis -- Chapter 2 Augustan Influences -- 2.1 The Architectural Orders -- 2.2 The Attic Story -- 2.3 The Library of Peace -- Chapter 3 The Surviving Halls -- 3.1 The Temple of Peace in the Axial Hall -- 3.2 The Hall of the Forma Urbis: Memory and Civic Identity -- 3.3 The Two Halls toward the Via Sacra: Preliminary Considerations -- Chapter 4 Grammarians, Philosophers, and Doctors in the Templum Pacis -- 4.1 Books, Storerooms, Libraries, and Copies -- 4.2 Galen and the Slanderers of the Templum Pacis -- Chapter 5 "In a Style Surpassing All Human Conception" (Josephus, JW 7.5.7, 158): The Art Collection -- 5.1 Decorating the Templum Pacis -- 5.2 The Fire of AD 192 and the Severan Restoration -- PART II Technical Analysis -- Chapter 6 Building Materials and Construction Techniques -- 6.1 A Chronology -- 6.2 Brick Facings -- 6.3 Concrete -- 6.4 Squared-Stone Masonry (opus quadratum) -- 6.5 Red-Painted Blocks and Bricks -- Chapter 7 The Original Structures -- 7.1 The Ashlar Wall Facing the Clivus -- 7.2 The Staircase -- 7.3 The Rear Wall of the Southeast Portico -- 7.4 The Wall of the Forma Urbis -- Chapter 8 The Remodeling of the Original Corner Hall -- 8.1 The Brickwork Structure in the Hall behind the Marble Plan -- 8.2 The Side Walls of the Great Hall -- 8.3 The Wall Facing the Via Sacra -- 8.4 The Flavian and Severan Halls: Reconstruction and Function -- Notes -- PART III The Great Hall in the Fourth Century -- Chapter 9 The Via Sacra Rotunda -- 9.1 The Rotunda and the Side Halls -- 9.2 The Masonry and the Brickstamps. , 9.3 Reconstructing the Process of Design -- 9.4 Structural Anomalies -- 9.5 The Round Vestibule -- 9.6 The Original Façade -- 9.7 The Side Halls -- 9.8 The Connection with the Great Hall -- 9.9 The Concrete Dome -- Chapter 10 The Late Antique Remodeling -- 10.1 Maxentius versus Constantine? -- 10.2 The Curvilinear Façade -- 10.3 The Dark Side of the Dome -- 10.4 The Apsidal Arch and the Rear Façade -- 10.5 The Side Walls -- 10.6 The New Apse -- 10.7 The Semidome of the Apse: Tubi Fittili versus Concrete -- 10.8 The Marble Veneer in the Rotunda and in the Great Hall -- 10.9 The Function of the Round Vestibule, the Side Halls, and the Great Apsed Hall -- 10.10 Conclusions -- PART IV AVLA DEI The Basilica of Pope Felix IV (AD 526-530) -- Chapter 11 The Christian Basilica -- Chapter 12 The Mosaics -- PART V The Templum Pacis in the Middle Ages -- Chapter 13 The Christian Basilica from the Sixth Century until the Ninth Century -- 13.1 The Frescoes and the Floor Levels -- 13.2 The Early Middle Ages -- 13.3 The Carolingian Age -- Chapter 14 The Basilica during the Second Rebirth of Rome: The Twelfth Century -- 14.1 The Entrance to the Basilica -- 14.2 The Medieval Portico -- 14.3 The Constantinian Inscription (CIL VI 1147) -- 14.4 The Romanesque Bell Tower -- 14.5 The Transverse Wall -- 14.6 The Schola Cantorum -- 14.7 The High Altar -- 14.8 The Windows of the Apse -- 14.9 Wandering Spoils -- Chapter 15 Funerary Monuments: Memento Mori -- 15.1 Cardinal Guido's Tomb and a Red GRANITE Tub -- 15.2 Reused Sarcophagi -- 15.3 A Funerary Monument of the Vassalletto -- PART VI Between Renaissance and Baroque -- Chapter 16 The Basilica and the Monastery in the Fifteenth and Sixteenth Centuries -- 16.1 Antiquarians and Diggers -- 16.2 The Franciscans of the Third Order Regulare at SS. Cosma e Damiano. , 16.3 Onofrio Panvinio's Description: "composita ex tribus vetustis temples" -- 16.4 "Cosa rara e bella": The Discovery of the Forma Urbis -- 16.5 Pirro Ligorio's Survey -- 16.6 The Basilica and the Monastery after 1562 -- 16.7 "Un thesoro nascosto": The Discovery of the Relics in 1582 -- 16.8 The Repairs in the "Old" Monastery (1576 and 1586-1587) -- 16.9 Pompeo Ugonio's Description: "Alcune cose son certe, & -- alcune dubbie" -- Chapter 17 The Contea and the Construction of the Monastery in the Early Seventeenth Century -- 17.1 The Area of the Templum Pacis in the Early Seventeenth Century -- 17.2 The Northeast Wing of the Monastery and the Area toward the Basilica of Maxentius (1611-1614) -- 17.3 The Completion of the Monastery and the Granaries in the Basilica of Maxentius (1624-1625 and 1630) -- Chapter 18 The Remodelings of the Basilica of SS. Cosma e Damiano under Clement VIII and Urban VIII -- 18.1 Clement VIII and the Side Chapels (1602) -- 18.2 Urban VIII - Demolisher and Restorer: The Pantheon and the Templum Pacis -- 18.3 The Apostolic Visitation of November 10, 1625 -- 18.4 The Demolition of the Wall Called the "Anticaglia" (1626-1629) and the First Remodeling of the Basilica (1629-1630) -- 18.5 The Demolition of the Ashlar Wall Facing the Basilica of Maxentius (1630-1632) -- 18.6 The Raising of the Floor and the Construction of the Wooden Ceiling (1630-1632) -- 18.7 The Final Decoration of the Basilica (1633-1638) -- 18.8 Appendix: Payments for the Remodeling of the Basilica under Urban VIII -- PART VII Modern Excavations and Restorations -- Chapter 19 Excavating the Templum Pacis in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century -- 19.1 "Un silenzio inesplicabile": Tocco's Digs in the Hall of the Forma Urbis (July 29-September 28, 1867) -- 19.2 Parker's Excavation along the Clivus (1868) and the "Local Jealousy of Strangers". , 19.3 The Expropriation of the Monastery and a Misinterpreted Excavation (1875) -- 19.4 The Excavation of the Via Sacra "innanzi la fronte del tempio del divo Romolo" (April 1878-April 1879) -- 19.5 "There Was No Other Place within Aurelian's Walls So Suited to Mature the Juice of the Grape and Provide It with a Flavour of Antiquity": The Excavation of the Clivus ad Carinas (October 1879-March 1880) -- 19.6 "I disegni ligoriani che ci hanno illuminato e diretto nella esecuzione dello scavo": The Restoration of the "Temple of Romulus" (March-June 1880) -- 19.7 "Il libero possesso di quell'area mi è indispensabile onde eseguire lo scavo della pianta di Roma": The Garden of the Monastery and the Clivus (1880-1882) -- 19.8 The New Excavations in the Garden (1891 and 1899) and the Reconstruction of the Forma Urbis in 1903 -- 19.9 "Tale triste notizia": The Separation of the Rotunda from the Basilica (1890-1899) -- Chapter 20 The Monastery and the Basilica in the Twentieth Century -- 20.1 "Tutte le autorità che si interessano dei monumenti sono in subbuglio": The Reconstruction of the Monastery (1944-1947) -- 20.2 The Restoration of the Rotunda (1979-2000) -- Conclusion -- Notes -- Bibliography -- INDEX (Names) -- INDEX (Places).
    Additional Edition: ISBN 1-107-17421-X
    Language: English
    URL: Volltext  (lizenzpflichtig)
    Library Location Call Number Volume/Issue/Year Availability
    BibTip Others were also interested in ...
Close ⊗
This website uses cookies and the analysis tool Matomo. Further information can be found on the KOBV privacy pages