Listing 1 - 10 of 12 | << page >> |
Sort by
|
Choose an application
INDEXES --- TAXONOMY --- DISEASES --- PEST CONTROL --- PLANT HORMONES --- GROWTH REGULATORS --- CONTROL --- LAYERING --- HORTICULTURE --- PROPAGATION --- MANUALS
Choose an application
Plant propagation --- Crops --- Vegetative propagation --- Layering --- Propagation by cuttings --- Ornamental plants --- trees --- Shrubs
Choose an application
Epinette noire --- Marcottage --- Reproduction --- Picea mariana --- Croissance --- Growth --- Régénération artificielle --- Artificial regeneration --- Layering --- Biométrie --- Biometry --- Hauteur --- height --- Canada --- Québec --- Quebec --- Quebec. --- Epinette noire - Canada - Reproduction - Bibliographie --- Epinette noire - Etats-Unis - Reproduction - Bibliographie --- Marcottage - Bibliographie
Choose an application
The temple's history and its decorationReused blocks originating from the Old KingdomReused blocks found in place and originating from the early Twelfth DynastyBlocks from Amenemhat I's Temple .
Pyramids --- Relief (Art) --- Architecture, Ancient --- Amenemhet --- Tomb --- Lisht Site (Egypt) --- Egypt --- Antiquities --- Pyramides -- Égypte --- Art, Ancient --- Antiquities. --- 3-D painting --- Layering (Art) --- Relief art --- Relief painting --- Relief panel --- Three-dimensional painting --- Art, Modern --- Pyramids - Egypt --- Relief (Art) - Egypt --- Architecture, Ancient - Egypt --- Amenemhet - I, - King of Egypt, - -1962 B.C. - Tomb --- Egypt - Antiquities --- Amenemhet - I, - King of Egypt, - -1962 B.C.
Choose an application
"A new way to understand the architecture of today's Internet, based on an innovative general model of network architecture that is rigorous, realistic, and modularThis book meets the long-standing need for an explanation of how the Internet's architecture has evolved since its creation to support an ever-broader range of the world's communication needs. The authors introduce a new model of network architecture that exploits a powerful form of modularity to provide lucid, insightful descriptions of complex structures, functions, and behaviors in today's Internet. Countering the idea that the Internet's architecture is "ossified" or rigid, this model-which is presented through hundreds of examples rather than mathematical notation-encompasses the Internet's original or "classic" architecture, its current architecture, and its possible future architectures.For practitioners, the book offers a precise and realistic approach to comparing design alternatives and guiding the ongoing evolution of their applications, technologies, and security practices. For educators and students, the book presents patterns that recur in many variations and in many places in the Internet ecosystem. Each pattern tells a compelling story, with a common problem to be solved and a range of solutions for solving it. For researchers, the book suggests many directions for future research that exploit modularity to simplify, optimize, and verify network implementations without loss of functionality or flexibility"--
Internet. --- Computer. --- IP. --- Internet architecture. --- bridging. --- communication. --- composing networks. --- compositional network architecture. --- computer engineer. --- computer network technology. --- computer network. --- design patterns. --- graduate textbook networking. --- interfaces. --- internet evolution. --- internet protocol. --- internet security. --- layered architecture. --- layering. --- message. --- middlebox. --- naming. --- network architecture. --- network design. --- network mobility. --- network optimization. --- network practitioners. --- network services. --- network verification. --- patterns in networking. --- services. --- session protocols. --- subduction. --- verification. --- virtualization.
Choose an application
The Tabulae Iliacae are a group of carved stone plaques created in the context of early Imperial Rome that use miniature images and text to retell stories from Greek myth and history - chief among them Homer's Iliad and the fall of Troy. In this book, Professor Petrain moves beyond the narrow focus on the literary and iconographic sources of the Tabulae that has characterized earlier scholarship. Drawing on ancient and modern theories of narrative, he explores instead how the tablets transfer the Troy saga across both medium and culture as they create a system of visual storytelling that relies on the values and viewing habits of Roman viewers. The book comprehensively situates the tablets in the urban fabric of Augustan Rome. New photographs of the tablets, together with re-editions and translations of key inscriptions, offer a new, clearer view of these remarkable documents of the Roman appropriation of Greek epic.
Mythology, Greek, in art. --- Civilization, Homeric. --- Classical antiquities. --- Relief (Art) --- Relief (Sculpture), Roman. --- Mythologie grecque dans l'art --- Civilisation homérique --- Antiquités gréco-romaines --- Relief (Sculpture) romain --- Homer. --- Literary collections --- Ancient, Classical et Medieval --- bisacsh --- Relief (Art). --- Reliëfs. --- Inscripties. --- Receptie. --- Romeinse keizertijd. --- Iliad (Homer). --- Tabula Iliaca. --- bisacsh. --- Civilisation homérique --- Antiquités gréco-romaines --- Roman relief (Sculpture) --- 3-D painting --- Layering (Art) --- Relief art --- Relief painting --- Relief panel --- Three-dimensional painting --- Art, Modern --- Antiquities, Classical --- Antiquities, Grecian --- Antiquities, Roman --- Archaeology, Classical --- Classical archaeology --- Roman antiquities --- Antiquities --- Archaeological museums and collections --- Art, Ancient --- Classical philology --- Homeric civilization --- Homer
Choose an application
Blind --- -Blind --- -Relief (Art) --- Relief models --- -003.24 --- 376.32 --- Geography --- Modeling, Topographical --- Relief-maps --- Terrain models --- Topographical modeling --- Models and modelmaking --- Blind people --- Blind persons --- Blindness --- People with visual disabilities --- Deafblind people --- Books and reading --- -History --- Education --- History --- Braille. Schriftsoorten voor blinden --- Blinden: onderwijs. Gezichtsgestoorden: onderwijs --- Models --- Patients --- Relief (Art) --- Touch. --- History. --- 376.32 Blinden: onderwijs. Gezichtsgestoorden: onderwijs --- 003.24 Braille. Schriftsoorten voor blinden --- Relief (Art). --- Touch --- 003.24 --- Feeling --- Haptic sense --- Haptics --- Tactile perception --- Tactual perception --- Somesthesia --- Books and reading&delete& --- Education&delete& --- 3-D painting --- Layering (Art) --- Relief art --- Relief painting --- Relief panel --- Three-dimensional painting --- Art, Modern
Choose an application
The essays in this collection aim to waken contemporary discussions of ethos(and of rhetoric generally) from their Western, classical-Aristotelian slumbers.Western rhetoric was never univocal in its theory or practice of ethos: the essaysin this collection provide proof of this. The contributors aimed to shake rhetoricout of its Eurocentrism: the traditions of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia sustaintheir own models of ethos and lead us to reconsider rhetoric in its richvariety—what ethos was, is, and will become. This collection is groundbreakingin its attempt to outline the diversity of argument, trust, and authority beyonda singular, dominant perspective.This collection offers readers a choice of itineraries: thematic, geographic, andhistorical. Essays may be read individually or cumulatively, as exercises incomparative rhetoric. In taking a world perspective, Histories of Ethos willprove a seminal discussion. Its comparative approach will help readers appreciatethe commonalities and the distinctions in competing cultural-discursivepractices—in what brings us together and what drives us apart as communities.Additionally, it is the editors’ hope that, out of this historical, multiculturaldialogue, some new perspectives on ethos may come forward to broaden ourdiscussion and reach of understanding.
Philosophy --- ethos --- selfhood --- identity --- authenticity --- authority --- persona --- positionality --- postmodernism --- haunt --- iatrology --- trust --- storytelling --- Archer --- Aristotle --- Bourdieu --- Corder --- Foucault --- Geertz --- Giddens --- Gusdorf --- Heidegger --- African American literature --- slave narratives --- Phillis Wheatley --- Martin Luther King --- Malcolm X --- W.E.B. Du Bois --- Booker T. Washington --- Oglala Lakota --- wound --- ecology --- ecological --- Wounded Knee --- American Indian --- cultural wound --- hip hop --- black aesthetics --- New York --- flow --- layering --- rupture --- productive consumption --- hype --- entrepreneurship --- politics --- counter-knowledge --- class --- social class --- working class --- habitus --- social capital --- GLBT/LGBTQ --- queer --- normativity --- homonormativity --- polemic --- futurity --- undecidability --- re/disorientation --- legitimacy --- rhetorical agency --- outness --- Islamic ethos --- nonwestern rhetorics --- Islamophobia --- The Qur’an --- Sunnah --- Ijtihad --- Islamic State --- Muslim community (Ummah) --- Caliphate --- disability --- invention --- rehabilitation --- accessibility --- inclusion --- intersectionality --- cross-disability identity --- actant --- cyborg --- COVID-19 --- deep ecology --- pandemic --- posthumanism --- skeptron --- technoculture --- Braidotti --- Haraway --- Latour --- African slave trade --- trauma --- visual rhetorics --- wolof language --- Dakar --- Door of No Return --- Gorée Island --- House of Slaves --- Senegal --- contemporary ethos --- Ghana --- dialogic --- heteroglossia --- postmodern discourses --- proverbs --- sexual identity --- sexual presentation --- conservative values --- tradition --- Chinese ethos --- rhetoric --- early Chinese rhetoric --- Heaven --- cultural heritage
Choose an application
The essays in this collection aim to waken contemporary discussions of ethos(and of rhetoric generally) from their Western, classical-Aristotelian slumbers.Western rhetoric was never univocal in its theory or practice of ethos: the essaysin this collection provide proof of this. The contributors aimed to shake rhetoricout of its Eurocentrism: the traditions of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia sustaintheir own models of ethos and lead us to reconsider rhetoric in its richvariety—what ethos was, is, and will become. This collection is groundbreakingin its attempt to outline the diversity of argument, trust, and authority beyonda singular, dominant perspective.This collection offers readers a choice of itineraries: thematic, geographic, andhistorical. Essays may be read individually or cumulatively, as exercises incomparative rhetoric. In taking a world perspective, Histories of Ethos willprove a seminal discussion. Its comparative approach will help readers appreciatethe commonalities and the distinctions in competing cultural-discursivepractices—in what brings us together and what drives us apart as communities.Additionally, it is the editors’ hope that, out of this historical, multiculturaldialogue, some new perspectives on ethos may come forward to broaden ourdiscussion and reach of understanding.
ethos --- selfhood --- identity --- authenticity --- authority --- persona --- positionality --- postmodernism --- haunt --- iatrology --- trust --- storytelling --- Archer --- Aristotle --- Bourdieu --- Corder --- Foucault --- Geertz --- Giddens --- Gusdorf --- Heidegger --- African American literature --- slave narratives --- Phillis Wheatley --- Martin Luther King --- Malcolm X --- W.E.B. Du Bois --- Booker T. Washington --- Oglala Lakota --- wound --- ecology --- ecological --- Wounded Knee --- American Indian --- cultural wound --- hip hop --- black aesthetics --- New York --- flow --- layering --- rupture --- productive consumption --- hype --- entrepreneurship --- politics --- counter-knowledge --- class --- social class --- working class --- habitus --- social capital --- GLBT/LGBTQ --- queer --- normativity --- homonormativity --- polemic --- futurity --- undecidability --- re/disorientation --- legitimacy --- rhetorical agency --- outness --- Islamic ethos --- nonwestern rhetorics --- Islamophobia --- The Qur’an --- Sunnah --- Ijtihad --- Islamic State --- Muslim community (Ummah) --- Caliphate --- disability --- invention --- rehabilitation --- accessibility --- inclusion --- intersectionality --- cross-disability identity --- actant --- cyborg --- COVID-19 --- deep ecology --- pandemic --- posthumanism --- skeptron --- technoculture --- Braidotti --- Haraway --- Latour --- African slave trade --- trauma --- visual rhetorics --- wolof language --- Dakar --- Door of No Return --- Gorée Island --- House of Slaves --- Senegal --- contemporary ethos --- Ghana --- dialogic --- heteroglossia --- postmodern discourses --- proverbs --- sexual identity --- sexual presentation --- conservative values --- tradition --- Chinese ethos --- rhetoric --- early Chinese rhetoric --- Heaven --- cultural heritage
Choose an application
The essays in this collection aim to waken contemporary discussions of ethos(and of rhetoric generally) from their Western, classical-Aristotelian slumbers.Western rhetoric was never univocal in its theory or practice of ethos: the essaysin this collection provide proof of this. The contributors aimed to shake rhetoricout of its Eurocentrism: the traditions of Africa, the Middle East, and Asia sustaintheir own models of ethos and lead us to reconsider rhetoric in its richvariety—what ethos was, is, and will become. This collection is groundbreakingin its attempt to outline the diversity of argument, trust, and authority beyonda singular, dominant perspective.This collection offers readers a choice of itineraries: thematic, geographic, andhistorical. Essays may be read individually or cumulatively, as exercises incomparative rhetoric. In taking a world perspective, Histories of Ethos willprove a seminal discussion. Its comparative approach will help readers appreciatethe commonalities and the distinctions in competing cultural-discursivepractices—in what brings us together and what drives us apart as communities.Additionally, it is the editors’ hope that, out of this historical, multiculturaldialogue, some new perspectives on ethos may come forward to broaden ourdiscussion and reach of understanding.
Philosophy --- ethos --- selfhood --- identity --- authenticity --- authority --- persona --- positionality --- postmodernism --- haunt --- iatrology --- trust --- storytelling --- Archer --- Aristotle --- Bourdieu --- Corder --- Foucault --- Geertz --- Giddens --- Gusdorf --- Heidegger --- African American literature --- slave narratives --- Phillis Wheatley --- Martin Luther King --- Malcolm X --- W.E.B. Du Bois --- Booker T. Washington --- Oglala Lakota --- wound --- ecology --- ecological --- Wounded Knee --- American Indian --- cultural wound --- hip hop --- black aesthetics --- New York --- flow --- layering --- rupture --- productive consumption --- hype --- entrepreneurship --- politics --- counter-knowledge --- class --- social class --- working class --- habitus --- social capital --- GLBT/LGBTQ --- queer --- normativity --- homonormativity --- polemic --- futurity --- undecidability --- re/disorientation --- legitimacy --- rhetorical agency --- outness --- Islamic ethos --- nonwestern rhetorics --- Islamophobia --- The Qur’an --- Sunnah --- Ijtihad --- Islamic State --- Muslim community (Ummah) --- Caliphate --- disability --- invention --- rehabilitation --- accessibility --- inclusion --- intersectionality --- cross-disability identity --- actant --- cyborg --- COVID-19 --- deep ecology --- pandemic --- posthumanism --- skeptron --- technoculture --- Braidotti --- Haraway --- Latour --- African slave trade --- trauma --- visual rhetorics --- wolof language --- Dakar --- Door of No Return --- Gorée Island --- House of Slaves --- Senegal --- contemporary ethos --- Ghana --- dialogic --- heteroglossia --- postmodern discourses --- proverbs --- sexual identity --- sexual presentation --- conservative values --- tradition --- Chinese ethos --- rhetoric --- early Chinese rhetoric --- Heaven --- cultural heritage
Listing 1 - 10 of 12 | << page >> |
Sort by
|