474,250 research outputs found
XLV. Xosé Maria Alvarez Blazquez
Introduzione bio-bibliografica alla poesia di X. M. Alvarez Blazquez, con antologia di testi e traduzione
Jose E. D. Rodriguez
Photograph shows Jose E. D. Rodriguez, as an elderly man, wearing chaps and standing with his horse
Roxana Guadalupe Herrera Alvarez: entrevista 1449
Entrevista com Roxana Guadalupe Herrera Alvarez, uma das organizadoras do livro Lugares de identidade: manifestações do literário, publicado pela Editora Unesp.Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Pós-Graduação em Letras, Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas (IBILCE), São José do Rio PretoUniversidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Departamento de Letras Modernas, Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas (IBILCE), São José do Rio Pret
Roxana Guadalupe Herrera Alvarez: entrevista 1711
Entrevista com Roxana Guadalupe Herrera Alvarez, autora do livro A esfera da percepção: considerações sobre o conto de Julio Cortázar, publicado pela Editora Unesp.Universidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Pós-Graduação em Letras, Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas (IBILCE), São José do Rio PretoUniversidade Estadual Paulista (UNESP), Departamento de Letras Modernas, Instituto de Biociências, Letras e Ciências Exatas (IBILCE), São José do Rio Pret
Elizabeth Hayes Alvarez: Valiant Woman [Audio interview]
In contemporary American culture the Virgin Mary is associated with Catholic devotion and worship. Because of this, it should come as a surprise to many readers that the mother of Jesus was a general cultural icon in the latter half of nineteenth century Christian America. Temple professor Elizabeth Hayes Alvarez details this history in her new book, The Valiant Woman: The Virgin Mary in Nineteenth Century American Culture (University of North Carolina Press, 2016). Images and references to Mary proliferated in popular magazines and on the walls of modest and fashionable homes, appealing to both Protestant and Catholic audiences. The Civil War, industrial revolution, and westward expansion transformed the United States. The rise of major urban centers like New York, Philadelphia, Chicago, and St. Louis drew in rural migrants and immigrants, unsettling religious, gender, and social norms. In these early years of mass society when the old agrarian ways were slipping away, the focus on the Virgin Mary offered a safe and familiar way of talking about and negotiating new female roles in this changing social landscape. Professor Alvarez traces the career of Mary from the declaration of the Immaculate Conception by Pope Pius IX in 1854 through its fiftieth anniversary in 1904. Fred Rowland spoke to Elizabeth Hayes Alvarez about her book on November 7, 2016.Temple University. College of Liberal ArtsTemple University. LibrariesLearning & Research ServicesReligionAudacityAudacit
Ecocentrist and anthropocentrist attitudes in developing and developed countries
This research explains what and how contextual wealth factors condition the influence of individual wealth factors on environmental attitudes in developing countries compared to developed ones. This work considers aspects of two types of attitudes, ecocentrism and anthropocentrism. The first type deems environmental protection important because nature is intrinsically valuable, while the second considers nature valuable for its utilitarian function to humans. Given that the physical proximity of human residence to environmental issues is one aspect that determines the type of attitude, and that certain national contexts are more likely to be plagued with immediate environmental problems (e.g., poor sewage and sanitation quality), individual attitudes of anthropocentrism and ecocentrism will prevail differently according to the individual’s national context. Explicitly, I argue that individual wealth positively predicts ecocentrist attitudes, and that this effect is stronger among developed-country residents, relative to residents in developing countries. On the other hand, individual wealth has a negative effect on anthropocentrist attitudes; thus, this effect is expected to be stronger among developing-country residents, relative to developed-country residents. To examine these theoretical expectations, this study uses survey data, in over thirty countries, from the World Value survey 2005-2009. The empirical analyses use standard and multilevel logistic regression modelling to assess the theoretical arguments just mentioned.<br/
XXV. Alfonso Daniel Rodriguez Castelao
Introduzione bio-bibliografica alla poesia di Castelao, con antologia di testi e traduzione
Oscillatory regime in excitatory media with global coupling: Application to cardiac dynamics
Whose “Fault” Is This? Untangling Domain Concepts in an Ontology of Resilient Computing
Certain ontology domain concepts are difficult to model due to the complexity of their definition, the number of roles that they fulfill or the different types of relationships they participate in. To assist ontologists in overcoming these challenges, a comparative analysis of two Ontology Design Patterns (ODPs) has been carried out. A terminology is introduced that describes the role and certain reusability scenarios of domain concepts in the ODPs studied. These findings make explicit certain potentially implicit modeling decisions previously taken in the ontology modeling field. Our contribution is illustrated with a concrete example from an ontology of resilient computing that will benefit from the outcome of this study
Alvarez, E.
Centro Asturiano membership record of E. Alvarez; Socio Number: 92800.https://digitalcommons.usf.edu/asturiano_membership/1110/thumbnail.jp
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