05666nam 2200793Ia 450 99621458790331620240410091400.01-78268-603-71-280-28597-497866102859761-4051-6504-90-470-99641-21-4051-5208-7(CKB)1000000000342095(EBL)243574(OCoLC)475964596(SSID)ssj0000126207(PQKBManifestationID)11139897(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000126207(PQKBWorkID)10030927(PQKB)10055161(MiAaPQ)EBC243574(Au-PeEL)EBL243574(CaPaEBR)ebr10158794(CaONFJC)MIL28597(OCoLC)935228390(PPN)14858859X(EXLCZ)99100000000034209520041217d2005 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrA companion to the literatures of colonial America[electronic resource] /edited by Susan Castillo and Ivy Schweitzer1st ed.Malden, MA ;Oxford Blackwell Pub.20051 online resource (626 p.)Blackwell companions to literature and culture ;35Description based upon print version of record.1-4051-1291-3 Includes bibliographical references and index.A Companion to the Literatures of Colonial America; Contents; List of Figures; Notes on Contributors; Introduction; Part I Issues and Methods; 1 Prologomenal Thinking: Some Possibilities and Limits of Comparative Desire; 2 First Peoples: An Introduction to Early Native American Studies; 3 Toward a Cultural Geography of Colonial American Literatures: Empire, Location, Creolization; 4 Textual Investments: Economics and Colonial American Literatures; 5 The Culture of Colonial America: Theology and Aesthetics; 6 Teaching the Text of Early American Literature7 Teaching with the New Technology: Three Intriguing OpportunitiesPart II New World Encounters; 8 Recovering Precolonial American Literary History: ""The Origin of Stories"" and the Popol Vub; 9 Toltec Mirrors: Europeans and Native Americans in Each Other's Eyes; 10 Reading for Indian Resistance; 11 Refocusing New Spain and Spanish Colonization: Malinche,Guadalupe, and Sor Juana; 12 British Colonial Expansion Westwards: Ireland and America; 13 The French Relation and Its ''Hidden'' Colonial History; 14 Visions of the Other in Sixteenth and Seventeenth-Century Writing to Brazil15 New World Ethnography, the Caribbean, and Behn's OroonokoPart III Negotiating Identities; 16 Gendered Voices from Lima and Mexico: Clarinda,Amarilis, and Sor Juana; 17 Cleansing Mexican Antiquity: Sor Juana Inés de la Cruz and the loa to The Divine Narcissus; 18 Hemispheric Americanism: Latin American Exiles and US Revolutionary Writings; 19 Putting Together the Pieces: Notes on the Eighteenth-Century Literary Imagination; 20 The Transoceanic Emergence of American ''Postcolonial'' Identities; Part IV Genres and Writers: Cross-Cultural Conversations21 The Genres of Exploration and Conquest Literatures22 The Conversion Narrative in Early America; 23 Indigenous Literacies: New England and New Spain; 24 America's First Mass Media: Preaching and the Protestant Sermon Tradition; 25 Neither Here Nor There: Transatlantic Epistolarity in Early America; 26 True Relations and Critical Fictions: The Case of the Personal Narrative in Colonial American Literatures; 27 ''Cross-Cultural Conversations'': The Captivity Narrative; 28 Epic, Creoles, and Nation in Spanish America29 Plainness and Paradox: Colonial Tensions in the Early New England Religious Lyric30 Captivating Animals: Science and Spectacle in Early American Natural Histories; 31 Challenging Conventional Historiography: The Roaming ""I""/Eye in Early Colonial American Eyewitness Accounts; 32 Republican Theatricality and Transatlantic Empire; 33 Reading Early American Fiction; IndexThis broad introduction to Colonial American literatures brings out the comparative and transatlantic nature of the writing of this period and highlights the interactions between native, non-scribal groups, and Europeans that helped to shape early American writing.Situates the writing of this period in its various historical and cultural contexts, including colonialism, imperialism, diaspora, and nation formation. Highlights interactions between native, non-scribal groups and Europeans during the early centuries of exploration. Covers a wide range of approaches to definBlackwell companions to literature and culture ;35.American literatureColonial period, ca. 1600-1775History and criticismImperialism in literatureColonies in literatureUnited StatesLiteraturesHistory and criticismUnited StatesIntellectual life18th centuryUnited StatesIntellectual life17th centuryAmerican literatureHistory and criticism.Imperialism in literature.Colonies in literature.810.9/00118.06bclCastillo Susan P.1948-930324Schweitzer Ivy850398MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK996214587903316A companion to the literatures of colonial America2092679UNISA02181nam0 22004573i 450 VAN0016189120250217040847.194N978331939474920210614d2016 |0itac50 baengCH|||| |||||i e bcrClassical Electrodynamicsfrom Image Charges to the Photon Mass and Magnetic MonopolesFrancesco LacavaChamSpringer2016xiv, 195 p.ill.24 cm001VAN001178602001 Undergraduate lecture notes in physics210 Berlin [etc.]Springer2011-VAN00161892Classical Electrodynamics : from Image Charges to the Photon Mass and Magnetic Monopoles180514678-XXOptics, electromagnetic theory [MSC 2020]VANC022356MF78A25Electromagnetic theory, general [MSC 2020]VANC023180MF78AxxGeneral topics in optics and electromagnetic theory [MSC 2020]VANC037588MFClassical methods and problems in electrodynamicsKW:KElectrodynamicsKW:KMagnetic monopole in electrodynamicsKW:KMethod of image charges in electrodynamicsKW:KRelativistic covarianceKW:KRelativistic electrodynamicsKW:KRelativistic transformations of the electric fieldKW:KCHChamVANL001889LacavaFrancescoVANV145922768098Springer <editore>VANV108073650ITSOL20250606RICAhttp://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-39474-9E-book – Accesso al full-text attraverso riconoscimento IP di Ateneo, proxy e/o ShibbolethBIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI MATEMATICA E FISICAIT-CE0120VAN08NVAN00161891BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI MATEMATICA E FISICA08DLOAD e-book 2674 08eMF2674 20210614 Classical Electrodynamics : from Image Charges to the Photon Mass and Magnetic Monopoles1805146UNICAMPANIA