00814nam0-2200301---450-99000860882040332120080131145900.0000860882FED01000860882(Aleph)000860882FED0100086088220080131d1932----km-y0itay50------bagerUSy-------001yyBeiträge zur Kenntnis oxydierter ZelluloseFritz LorenzSt. LouisAlsatia1932104 p.22 cmChimica54120itaLorenz,Fritz306606ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK99000860882040332160 Misc. B 213/24FAGBCFAGBCBeiträge zur Kenntnis oxydierter Zellulose711968UNINA03409nam 2200505 a 450 991045431480332120210114040302.01-282-11915-X1-84920-497-7(CKB)1000000000748717(EBL)435389(OCoLC)429116343(OCoLC)647771011(StDuBDS)EDZ0000072184(MiAaPQ)EBC435389(PPN)238401219(EXLCZ)99100000000074871720120412d2008 fy 0engur|n|---|||||Introducing cultural studies[electronic resource] learning through practice /David WaltonLos Angeles, [Calif.] ;London SAGE20081 online resource (337 p.)Description based upon print version of record.1-4462-1305-6 1-4129-1895-2 Includes bibliographical references and index.Contents; Introduction; Part I: High Cultural Gladiators: Some Influential Early Models of Cultural Analysis; Chapter One: Culture and Anarchy in the UK: a dialogue with Matthew Arnold; Chapter Two: The Leavisites and T.S. Eliot Combat Mass Urban Culture; Chapter Three: Adorno, the Frankfurt School and the 'Culture Industry'; Part II: The Transformative Power of Working-Class Culture; Chapter Four: From A Day Out at the Seasside to the Milk Bar: Richard Hoggart and Working-Class Culture; Chapter Five: E.P. Thompson and Working-Class Culture as a Site of Conflict, Consciousness and ResistanceChapter Six: Towards a Recognizable Theory of Culture: Raymond WilliamsPart III: Consolidating Cultural Studies: Subcultures, the Popular, Ideology and Hegemony; Chapter Seven: Introducing Stuart Hall: The Importance and Re-evaluation of Popular Mass Culture; Chapter Eight: Youth Subcultures and Resistance: a Dialogue with Quadrophenia; Chapter Nine: Subcultures and Widening Horizons: Further Strategies for Practice; Chapter Ten: How to Dominate the Masses without Resorting to the Inquisition: Antonio Gramsci and Hegemony TheoryChapter Eleven: A Few Ways you might Adapt Louis Althusser's Ideas to Cultural Studies: A Dialogue with Dr Jekyll and Mr HydePart IV: Probing the Margins, Remembering the Forgotten: Representation, Subordination and Identity; Chapter Twelve: Crying Woolf! Thinking with Feminism; Chapter Thirteen: Adapting Theory to Explore Race, Ethnicity and Sexuality: the Case of East is East; Part V: Honing Your Skills, Conclusions and 'Begin-endings'; Chapter Fourteen: Heuristic Thinking, Creative Cri-tickle Acts and Further Research; IndexThe fundamental task facing students of cultural studies is the application of theory into critical practice, and this book offers its readers the conceptual tools to practice cultural analysis for themselves. It includes pedagogical features, such as dialogues, graphs, images, and recommended readings.Culture - Study and teachingCultureElectronic books.Culture - Study and teaching.Culture.306306.071Walton David1955-1047691StDuBDSStDuBDSBOOK9910454314803321Introducing cultural studies2475440UNINA04056nam 2201081z- 450 9910619469403321202210253-0365-4908-0(CKB)5670000000391580(oapen)https://directory.doabooks.org/handle/20.500.12854/93167(oapen)doab93167(EXLCZ)99567000000039158020202210d2022 |y 0engurmn|---annantxtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierMorphodynamic Evolution and Sustainable Development of Coastal SystemsMDPI - Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute20221 online resource (254 p.)3-0365-4907-2 Coastal systems are unique environments that provide socioeconomic benefits via a variety of different functions. These functions are influenced by changing morphology, which results from erosion and sedimentation at different spatiotemporal scales, from both natural forcing and human interventions. Additionally, interactions between coastal processes and coastal engineering works leads to both positive and negative impacts. These dynamics are expected to continually change with flood and erosion hazards increasing in the future due to changes in sea level rise and wave climate, and the acceleration of anthropogenic effects. Understanding the forcing factors, natural morphodynamic evolution, and response to potential future scenarios will help coastal policy makers to define suitable adaptation strategies and to assure the sustainable use of coastal systems, which allows us to further enjoy the numerous socioeconomic and environmental benefits.History of engineering & technologybicsscTechnology: general issuesbicsscAuthie estuaryback barrier marshBaltic SeaBarrier Inertiabarrier stabilitycliff retreatcoastal catch-upcoastal protectioncurrent jetsdegradationDelft3Ddune erosiondune toe volume changesdune vegetationerosionfield experimentsforedune recoverygeospatialland-based biomasslarge-scalelittoral sedimentlong-termlongshore transportmacro-tidal coastmarsh cliff erosionmeandering rivermodel scalingmorphodynamic feedbackmorphodynamicsmorphologyn/anature-based solutionsnumerical modellingovertoppingoverwashreefroller dynamicssalt marshsand net devicesand trapping fencessatellite time seriessea level risesediment budgetsediment-starved environmentsedimentationself-organisationshingle beachstormstorm erosionSWANtwo-channelunmanned aerial vehiclewave impactsWestern AustraliawetlandXBeachHistory of engineering & technologyTechnology: general issuesDissanayake Pushpaedt1278884Brown JenniferedtYates MarissaedtDissanayake PushpaothBrown JenniferothYates MarissaothBOOK9910619469403321Morphodynamic Evolution and Sustainable Development of Coastal Systems3014046UNINA