2,361 research outputs found

    The Collected Books of Richard Denner Volume 1

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    Richard Denner, poet, founder and sole operator of his own press, D-press, is a maker of beautiful little books. One calls them “little” without condescension because they are chapbooks, of various dimensions, each worthy of contemplation as an object in itself, and also as an example of what can be done by way of self-publication if one is ingenious enough. Denner has made a place for himself as an artist while remaining entirely outside the mainstream—a possibility for which we have few examples. Designed on a computer screen with the aid of a color copier, his dazzling books require no special technique, expense, or equipment. Even as an illustrator Denner tends to favor media—collage, linoleum block—which needn’t intimidate the novice, and he steals from others (in line drawing, from Cocteau and Matisse) so unabashedly that theft becomes a resource. Whatever is dubious about this—self-publication, minimal craft, plagiarism—falls before the authority of the books themselves, with their certitude, vitality, and evident integrity. (To see for yourself, go to the D-press website). The process of making books has become for Denner an integral part of the creative process of writing poems. Denner does not first write the book and then make the cover; the book and its contents are created at the same time. “In the early letter press editions, I wrote some of the poems right in the type case, utilizing the limitations of the size of the type and type case (how much poem can one print in a 4x5 inch area using 60 pt Bodoni bold)? Now that I use a computer, I pour my poems directly into the book using a publisher file, many poems evolving by their placement in series...” Much about Denner’s approach recalls another artist for whom pictorial and poetic ideas were born together in the imagination, William Blake. Blake invented a new method engraving in order to be able to combine it with letter-press printing, unifying the two processes into a single act of creation, as Richard has done with his computer.https://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/hmvla_jampa/1013/thumbnail.jp

    Hotel Denner mit Gästehaus

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    Label from Hotel Denner in Heidelberg, Germany. There is a red and blue illustration of a town and cliffside in the upper half and two buildings on either lower corner of the image representing the hotel and the guest house

    O direito e a direita = The rights and the right-wing: the operation lava-jato, the media and the power : a operação lava-jato, a mídia e o poder

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    Fil: Kunsch, Dimas Antônio. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina.Fil: Pacheco da Cruz, Denner. Universidad Nacional de Villa María; Argentina

    Stands on globalization / Manuel Denner

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    In Jason Inch’s TED talk on Future Globalization is advising that companies need to understand their consumer base in a rapidly changing global business environment. It is clear for everybody that globalization plays one role in this change; however, there are a few variables that are forming the term of globalization, such as mass migration, geopolitical orientation, the Internet and its way of easing communication. Knowledge about cultural differences is a crucial thing and even more important than it was ever before. Therefore corporations are obliged to also take economic and political variables into account if they want to target their respective audience. Moreover, Inch says that companies should be ensured that cultural understanding needs to be trained as well as languages, knowledge about religion, values and “most importantly” about the culinary delights in a given country. Nowadays, it is about transcreating and not about translating when it comes to doing business on an international basis. “Transcreating” is important because of the fact that we are now living in an interconnected world where only translating would not be effective, you have to make things understandable for everybody. Inch also stipulates that cultural awareness is determining success or failure in today’s world. People should build bridges by having that kind of knowledge and not being afraid and run away because they have a lack in intercultural communication. In my opinion, Inch is right in what he is saying; everybody nowadays needs to have intercultural knowledge to drive business forward. It is not only a good asset to have intercultural knowledge; it is a necessity to have it

    Visualizing Ambiguity: Two Italian Adaptations of The Kreutzer Sonata

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    The chapter addresses two Italian adaptations of "The Kreutzer Sonata", "Amanti senza amore" and "Quale amore" and discusses the way in which they deploy typical means of the national melodrama: decor, casting, and narrative and enunciational devices. In order to contextualize the films, their analysis is preceded by a historical survey of the reception of Tolstoy's work in Italian culture

    Stands on globalization opinion paper / Manuel Denner

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    In Jason Inch’s TED talk on Future Globalization is advising that companies need to understand their consumer base in a rapidly changing global business environment. It is clear for everybody that globalization plays one role in this change; however, there are a few variables that are forming the term of globalization, such as mass migration, geopolitical orientation, the Internet and its way of easing communication. Knowledge about cultural differences is a crucial thing and even more important than it was ever before. Therefore corporations are obliged to also take economic and political variables into account if they want to target t heir respective audience. Moreover, Inch says that companies should be ensured that cultural understanding needs to be trained as well as languages, knowledge about religion, values and “most importantly” about the culinary delights in a given country. Nowadays, it is about transcreating and not about translating when it comes to doing business on an international basis. “Transcreating” is important because of the fact that we are now living in an interconnected world where only translating would not be effective, you have to make things understandable for everybody. Inch also stipulates that cultural awareness is determining success or failure in today’s world. People should build bridges by having that kind of knowledge and not being afraid and run away be cause they have a lack in intercultural communication. In my opinion, Inch is right in what he is saying; everybody nowadays needs to have intercultural knowledge to drive business forward. It is not only a good asset to have intercultural knowledge; it is a necessity to have it

    Low-virtuality photon transitions gamma* -> f(f)over-bar and the photon-to-jet conversion fundtion [Low-virtuality photon transitions γ⁎→ff ̄ and the photon-to-jet conversion function]

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    The calculation of electroweak corrections to processes with jets in the final state involves contributions of low-virtuality photons leading to jets in the final state via the singular splitting γ⁎→qq ̄. These singularities can be absorbed into a photon-to-jet “fragmentation function”, better called “conversion function”, since the physical final state is any hadronic activity rather than an identified hadron. Using unitarity and a dispersion relation, we relate this γ⁎→qq ̄ conversion contribution to an integral over the imaginary part of the hadronic vacuum polarization and thus to the experimentally known quantity Δαhad(5)(MZ2). Therefore no unknown non-perturbative contribution remains that has to be taken from experiment. We also describe practical procedures following subtraction and phase-space-slicing approaches for isolating and cancelling the γ⁎→qq ̄ singularities against the photon-to-jet conversion function. The production of Z+jet at the LHC is considered as an example, where the photon-to-jet conversion is part of a correction of the order α2/αs relative to the leading-order cross section

    Denner-Record and Capps Building in Ft. Worth, Texas

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    Photograph of the Denner-Record building and the Capps building on Fifth and Throckmorton Streets in Ft. Worth, Texas. The building is five stories tall and brick with a fire escape. It is surrounded by a sidewalk that is lined with bicycles and horse-drawn buggies. On the left side of the frame is a church tower and on the right is a sign that reads, "SUCCESS"

    Approximations for e+ e- –-> W+ W-

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    Denner A, Dittmaier S, Fleischer J, Kneur JL, Kolodziej K. Approximations for e+ e- –-> W+ W-. 1991

    Jampa Dorje\u27s High Mountain Valley Local Authors Collection Talk

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    Jampa Dorje, also known as Richard Denner, is Ellensburg’s resident Tibetan Buddhist monk. He is an artist, painter, writer, and poet. This reception celebrates the collection of works by local authors that Jampa Dorje collected and donated to the CWU Archives and Special Collections. A video of the talk can be seen here: Jampa Dorje\u27s High Mountain Valley Local Authors Collection Talk Given 10.8.2019 Details of the collections can be found at this subject guide: High Mountain Valley Local Authors Collectionhttps://digitalcommons.cwu.edu/library_lectures/1036/thumbnail.jp
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