04380nam 22006731 450 991045907080332120121024150213.01-4725-4296-71-282-87502-797866128750211-4411-5552-X10.5040/9781472542960(CKB)2670000000056077(EBL)601537(OCoLC)680039185(SSID)ssj0000412581(PQKBManifestationID)12172439(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000412581(PQKBWorkID)10367258(PQKB)11026262(MiAaPQ)EBC601537(Au-PeEL)EBL601537(CaPaEBR)ebr10427432(CaONFJC)MIL287502(OCoLC)893335076(UtOrBLW)bpp09256721(EXLCZ)99267000000005607720140929d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrBeckett and phenomenology /edited by Ulrika Maude and Matthew FeldmanLondon ;New York :Continuum,2009.1 online resource (225 p.)Continuum literary studies seriesDescription based upon print version of record.1-4411-2317-2 0-8264-9714-4 Includes bibliographical references and index.Acknowledgements -- Notes on Contributors -- Introduction: Beckettian Phenomenologies? / Ulrika Maude (University of Durham) and Matthew Feldman (University of Northampton). PART I: BECKETT AND PHENOMENOLOGY. 1. 'But what was this pursuit of meaning, in this indifference to meaning?': Beckett, Husserl and 'Meaning Creation', / Matthew Feldman (University of Northampton) ; 2. Phenomenologies of the Nothing: Democritus, Heidegger, Beckett / Shane Weller (University of Kent at Canterbury) ; 3. Beckett and Sartre: The Nauseous Character of All Flesh / Steven Connor (Birkbeck College, University of London) ; 4. 'Material of a Strictly Peculiar Order': Beckett, Merleau-Ponty and Perception / Ulrika Maude (University of Durham) -- PART II: BECKETT'S PHENOMENOLOGIES. 5. Between Art-world and Life-world: Beckett's Dream of Fair to Middling Women / Mark Nixon (University of Reading) ; 6. Murphydurke, or towards a Phenomenology of Immaturity / Jean-Michel Rabat (University of Pennsylvania) ; 7. Bodily Histories: Beckett and the Phenomenological Approach to the Other / Steven Matthews (Oxford Brookes University) ; 8. What Remains of Beckett: Evasion and History / Daniel Katz (Université de Paris VII) ; 9. Beckett's Ghost Dramas: Monitoring a Phenomenology of Sleep / Paul Sheehan (Macquarie University, Sydney, Australia) ; 10. Living the Unnamable: A Phenomenology of Reading / Paul Stewart (University of Nicosia) ; 11. The 'Distinct Context of Relevant Knowledge': Beckett's 'Yellow' and the Phenomenology of Annotation / Chris Ackerley (University of Otago, Dunedin, New Zealand) -- Index."Existentialism and poststructuralism have provided the two main theoretical approaches to Samuel Beckett's work. These influential philosophical movements, however, owe a great debt to the phenomenological tradition. This volume, with contributions by major international scholars, examines the phenomenal in Beckett's literary worlds, comparing and contrasting his writing with key figures including Edmund Husserl, Martin Heidegger, Jean-Paul Sartre and Maurice Merleau-Ponty. It advances an analysis of hitherto unexplored phenomenological themes, such as nausea, immaturity and sleep, in Beckett's work. Through an exploration of specific thinkers and Beckett's own artistic method, it offers the first sustained and comprehensive account of Beckettian phenomenology."--Bloomsbury Publishing.Continuum literary studies.Phenomenology and literaturePhenomenology in literatureLiterary studies: from c 1900 -Electronic books.Phenomenology and literature.Phenomenology in literature.848.91409Feldman MatthewMaude UlrikaUtOrBLWUtOrBLWBOOK9910459070803321Beckett and phenomenology1965814UNINA06282nam 22003613a 450 991076578440332120250203235437.03-03897-277-010.3390/books978-3-03897-277-8(CKB)5400000000000622(ScCtBLL)150d62df-cc41-4b00-a503-f14449209479(OCoLC)1163817077(EXLCZ)99540000000000062220250203i20192019 uu enguru||||||||||txtrdacontentcrdamediacrrdacarrierAdvances in Quantitative Remote Sensing in China - In Memory of Prof. Xiaowen Li: Volume 2Jiancheng Shi, Guangjian Yan, Shunlin LiangBasel, Switzerland :MDPI,2019.1 online resource (1 p.)Quantitative land remote sensing has recently advanced dramatically, particularly in China. It has been largely driven by vast governmental investment, the availability of a huge amount of Chinese satellite data, geospatial information requirements for addressing pressing environmental issues and other societal benefits. Many individuals have also fostered and made great contributions to its development, and Prof. Xiaowen Li was one of these leading figures. This book is published in memory of Prof. Li. The papers collected in this book cover topics from surface reflectance simulation, inversion algorithm and estimation of variables, to applications in optical, thermal, Lidar and microwave remote sensing. The wide range of variables include directional reflectance, chlorophyll fluorescence, aerosol optical depth, incident solar radiation, albedo, surface temperature, upward longwave radiation, leaf area index, fractional vegetation cover, forest biomass, precipitation, evapotranspiration, freeze/thaw snow cover, vegetation productivity, phenology and biodiversity indicators. They clearly reflect the current level of research in this area. This book constitutes an excellent reference suitable for upper-level undergraduate students, graduate students and professionals in remote sensing.evapotranspiration; Northeast China; MS-PT algorithm; spatial-temporal variations; controlling factors; potential evapotranspiration; vegetation remote sensing; reflectance model; spectra; leaf; copper; PROSPECT; leaf area density; terrestrial LiDAR; tree canopy; vertical structure; voxel; spatial representativeness; heterogeneity; validation; land-surface temperature products (LSTs); observations; HiWATER; remote sensing; spatiotemporal representative; cost-efficientsampling design; heterogeneity; validation; FY-3C/MERSI; GLASS; Land surface temperature; Land surface emissivity; GPP; SIF; MuSyQ-GPP algorithm; BEPS; vegetation phenology; Tibetan Plateau; MODIS; NDVI; start of growing season (SOS); end of growing season (EOS); GLASS LAI time series; forest disturbance; disturbance index; latent heat; machine learning algorithms; plant functional type; high-resolution freeze/thaw; AMSR2; MODIS; LAI; ZY-3 MUX; GF-1 WFV; HJ-1 CCD; maize; PROSPECT-5B+SAILH (PROSAIL) model; spatial heterogeneity; variability; evapotranspiration; land surface variables; probability density function; HiWATER; spectral; albedometer; interference filter; photoelectric detector; validation; land surface albedo; multi-scale validation; rugged terrain; MRT-based model; MCD43A3 C6; precipitation; statistics methods; China; Tibetan Plateau; South China's; drought; SPI; TMI data; crop-growing regions; downward shortwave radiation; machine learning; gradient boosting regression tree; AVHRR; CMA; BRDF; aerosol; MODIS; sunphotometer; arid/semiarid; solar-induced chlorophyll fluorescence; fluorescence quantum efficiency in dark-adapted conditions (FQE); SCOPE; Fraunhofer Line Discrimination (FLD); gross primary productivity (GPP); longwave upwelling radiation (LWUP); Visible Infrared Imaging Radiometer Suite (VIIRS); surface radiation budget; hybrid method; remote sensing; leaf age; leaf spectral properties; leaf area index; Cunninghamia; Chinese fir; canopy reflectance; NIR; EVI2; geometric optical radiative transfer (GORT) model; land surface albedo; snow-free albedo; rugged terrain; topographic effects; black-sky albedo (BSA); GPP; NPP; MODIS; validation; phenology; RADARSAT-2; rice; Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR); decision tree; forest canopy height; aboveground biomass; ICESat GLAS; Landsat; random forest model; anisotropic reflectance; BRDF; rugged terrain; solo slope; composite slope; surface solar irradiance; geostationary satellite; polar orbiting satellite; LUT method; SURFRAD; downward shortwave radiation; daily average value; Antarctica; sinusoidal method; cloud fraction; interpolation; boreal forest; GPP; spatiotemporal distribution and variation; meteorological factors; phenological parameters; multisource data fusion; aerosol retrieval; urban scale; vegetation dust-retention; multiple ecological factors; geographical detector model; snow cover; passive microwave; FY-3C/MWRI; algorithmic assessment; China; land surface temperature; satellite observations; flux measurements; latitudinal pattern; land cover change; fractional vegetation cover (FVC); multi-data set; northern China; spatio-temporal; inter-annual variation; uncertainty; standard error of the mean; downscaling; GPP; spatial heterogeneity; remote sensing; subpixel information; LiDAR; point cloud; leaf; gap fraction; 3D reconstruction; biodiversity; remote sensing; species richness; metric comparison; metric integration; leaf area index; MODIS products; Landsat; high resolution; homogeneous and pure pixel filter; pixel unmixing; vertical vegetation stratification; gross primary production (GPP); light use efficiency; dense forest; MODIS; VPM; temperature profiles; humidity profiles; n/a; geometric-optical model; thermal radiation directionality; quantitative remote sensing inversion; scale effects; comprehensive field experimentShi Jiancheng1306126Yan GuangjianLiang ShunlinScCtBLLScCtBLLBOOK9910765784403321Advances in Quantitative Remote Sensing in China - In Memory of Prof. Xiaowen Li: Volume 24323182UNINA00919nam 2200265 450 99664077280331620250130123406.020250130d1946----km y0itay5003 bafreFRy 00 yJournal des Etats généraux et du début de l'Assemblée nationale18 mai-29 juillet 1789Jacques-Antoine Creuzé-Latouchepublié par Jean MarchandParisDidier1946LIV, 315 p.24 cmRivoluzione franceseFontiBNCF944.04CREUZE-LATOUCHE,Jacques-Antoine<1749-1800>1783287MARCHAND,Jean<1894-1988>ITcbaREICAT996640772803316X.2.A. 379 (IV D 105)34427 L.M.X.2.00029845BKUMAJournal des Etats généraux et du début de l'Assemblée nationale4310680UNISA