5,170 research outputs found
Following Manson Papers from the Peter Manson Symposium
Copyright: © 2020 The Author(s). Peter Manson (1969-) is a poet and translator of poetry from Glasgow. He is the author of several volumes of poetry including For the Good of Liars (Barque Press, 2006), Between Cup and Lip (Miami University Press, 2008), English in Mallarmé (Blart Books, 2014) and Poems of Frank Rupture (Sancho Panza, 2014), and of the prose-work Adjunct: an Undigest (Edinburgh Review 2006; ubuweb 2001). Recent poetry includes Factitious Airs (Zarf editions, 2017) and a collaboration with Mendoza, WINDSUCKERS & ONSETTERS: SONNOTS for Griffiths (MATERIALS, 2018). Manson is also a translator of poetry from French: his translation of Stéphane Mallarmé’s Poesies, twenty-five years in the making, was published as Stéphane Mallarmé: The Poems in Verse in 2013 (University of Miami Press). Further translations include Mallarmé’s The Marrying of Hérodiade (Free Poetry, 2016) and early poems by Théophile Gautier, Darkness (2018). With Robin Purves, Manson co-edited the poetry magazine, Object Permanence, from Glasgow, between 1994 and 1997, establishing vital transatlantic links between experimental poets from the UK and Ireland and the US. In October 2017, a symposium dedicated to Manson’s poetry and translations was held at the University of Glasgow, including an evening of celebratory readings and music, and a poetry reading by Manson. This special issue of the Journal of British and Irish Innovative Poetry collects essays extending many of the papers given that weekend.
This editorial is in three parts. First, Ellen Dillon discloses the personal impact of her compulsive engagement with Peter Manson’s work on her life as a reader and scholar, then Tom Betteridge reads ‘Gray Squirrel’ from Manson’s early pamphlet Birth Windows.1 These are followed by an introduction to each of the seven essays collected in this special issue.The Andrew Tannahill Fund for the Furtherance of Scottish Literature; The W.P Ker Fund; Scottish Network of Modernist Studies; School of English, Dublin City University
Uma análise sobre dualismo de Marylin Monroe e de Charles Manson encarnado na perspectiva estética de Marilyn Manson
Marilyn Manson é um grupo musical de rock muito reconhecido por sua personalidade e atitudes perniciosas, principalmente de seu líder Brian H. Warner. Formado em 1989 sob o nome Marilyn Manson & Spooky Kids, teve seu nome alterado para poder fechar contrato com a primeira grande gravadora de sua carreira, pois o empresário achava este nome muito extenso. Sua formação atual é Marilyn Manson (vocais), Juan Alderete (baixo) e, Paul Wiley (guitarra). A inspiração para o nome foi a combinação entre a icônica beleza de Marilyn Monroe e, o psicopata Charles Manson, fundador e líder de um grupo de homicidas na década de 60 (sessenta) do século passado
E-brainstorming: Optimization of collaborative learning thanks to online questionnaires
@inproceedings{CI-Lancieri-2005, author = {Lancieri, Luigi and Lavallard, Anne and Manson, Patrice}, title = {E-brainstorming: Optimization of collaborative learning thanks to online questionnaires}, booktitle = {IADIS International Conference Cognition and Exploratory Learning in Digital Age (CELDA 2005)}, year = {2005}, address = {Porto, Portugal} }International audienc
Terre Haute, Indiana, 1936-1937 Pennsylvania Railroad Overpass [40-C-1637; 40-C-2016-A; Contr. 1191]
3. Cont. 1191-40-C-2016-A. Taken 10-20-36 by J.B. Manson. Looking E. along floor of new Penn. Overhead. Construction workers shown on deck of bridge working with wood. An unfinished parapet is shown at right
Manson, Thomas H. - Letter to (SC 3547)
Finding aid, scan and typescript (Click on Additional Files below) for Manuscripts Small Collection 3547. Letter, 15 December (no year), to Thomas H. Manson, Oak Grove, Christian County, Kentucky from “Mary” in Fayette County, Tennessee. Writing to “My dear Parents,” she tells of visitors and friends in the area and asks about various aunts and uncles. She refers to visiting “Montgomery” (possibly Montgomery County, Tennessee, where a “Mary E. M. Manson” married a “William E. Palmer” in 1840). Her letter refers to a “Mr. Palmer” as well as to her children, including an “ugly girl” who she is anxious to compare with a cousin’s “pretty boy.
All in the same boat? A Study of the Experience of Royal Air Force Wives Today
This thesis is based on research carried out on RAF bases in the UK. The man part of the formal research (80%) was carried out on a large operational base in the west of England, anonymised here as RAF Blyton; the remaining 20% was carried out on a remote Scottish base, anonymised as RAF Rockall. Additional observational material was collected at a base in the midland area of England, anonymised as RAF Culswick.Studies of military wives and families, although not numerous, do exist, tending towards a broad sweep of the issues affecting families. This research is unique in its focus on the married 'patch' and particularly life in the married quarter, and how wives are shaped and survive in this environment. Also unusual is the emphasis of three key issues, emerging as close to wives' hearts. Rather than concentrating on the job, the focus is on marriage, friendship and community. Differences between the experience of wives of officers and non-commissioned personnel is another feature not present in detail in any other study.The study found that wives foster an ambiguous love/hate relationship with the RAF, and that wives are agents, who despite constraints imposed by military life (and awareness of conflict with prevailing social trends) can make important decisions regarding their contribution to and experience of military life. Due to mobility, managing friendships is found to be vital to wives, in the absence of other channels of support. Sadness caused by the superficiality of acquaintanceship and feelings of rootlessness within a community of mobile individuals is highlighted. Formal and informal social arrangements are identified and as desire to belong to the RAF community in different capacities is reported, due to husbands' intense involvement with the job, and distance from family roots. High participation in events on the base is not always found to correspond to high feelings of integration, and awareness of a high level of surveillance on the married patch is noted.</p
Reliability of repetitively avalanched wire-bonded low-voltage discrete power trench n-MOSFETs
This paper, for the first time, investigates the reliability of wire-bonded low-voltage discrete power trench n-MOSFETs that have been subjected to repetitive unclamped inductive switching (RUIS). Automotive MOSFETs driving inductive loads may be subjected to RUIS; hence, there is a need to characterize the failure mechanisms in such applications. The failure mechanisms of repetitively avalanched wire-bonded MOSFETs are shown to be wire-bond lift-off and source metal degradation/fatigue due to thermomechanical stress cycling. Temperature excursions from avalanche pulses cause thermomechanical stresses on the wire-bond/source-metal interface as a result of differences in thermal expansion coefficients between silicon and aluminum. Trench MOSFETs exhibited an average of 10% increase in on-state resistance due to source metal fatigue after 100 million cycles of repetitive avalanche. The number of cycles to failure is investigated as a function of the avalanched induced temperature changes and is shown to follow the Coffin-Manson law. These results are important for designers of automotive systems since they are capable of predicting the long-term reliability of wire-bonded discrete power semiconductor components
Brevulacus reticulatus Manson 1984
Brevulacus reticulatus Manson, 1984 Brevulacus reticulatus Manson, 1984: 26–27. Brevulacus reticulatus; Amrine & Stasny, 1994: 146. Brevulacus reticulatus; Hong & Zhang, 1996: 68. Brevulacus reticulatus; Skoracka, 2005: 25. Brevulacus reticulatus; Xue & Hong, 2006: 27. Brevulacus reticulatus; Xue et al., 2009: 72. Material examined. 6 females (slide number NJAUAcariEri353), from Quercus glauca Thunb. (Fagaceae), Huayang Town, Yang County, Shaanxi Province, P. R. China, 33°35'23' N, 107°32'26' E, elevation 1083m, 8 August 2005, coll. Xiao-Feng Xue & Zi-Wei Song; 3 females (slide number NJAUAcariEri364), from Quercus glauca Thunb. (Fagaceae), Maoping town, Yang County, Shaanxi Province, P. R. China, 33°31'08' N, 107°40'14' E, elevation 898m, 11 August 2005, coll. Zi-Wei Song and Xiao-Feng Xue; 8 females (slide number NJAUAcariEri414), from Quercus glauca Thunb. (Fagaceae), Cuihua Mountain, Xi' an City, Shaanxi Province, P. R. China, 34°59'40' N, 109°00'04' E, elevation 901m, 15 August 2005, coll. Xiao-Feng Xue & Zi-Wei Song; 9 females (slide number NJAUAcariEri117), from Quercus glauca Thunb. (Fagaceae), Baiyun Mountain, Song County, Henan Province, P. R. China, 33°39'56' N, 111°49'57' E, 14 July 2004, coll. Xiao-Feng Xue. Host. Quercus glauca Thunb. (Fagaceae). Relation to host. Vagrant. Distribution. China (Henan, Liaoning, Shaanxi), New Zealand, Poland.Published as part of Xue, Xiao-Feng, Han, Xiao, Song, Zi-Wei & Hong, Xiao-Yue, 2012, Eriophyoid mite fauna of Shaanxi Province, China, with descriptions of five new species (Acari: Eriophyoidea) 3292, pp. 1-71 in Zootaxa 3292 (1) on pages 62-63, DOI: 10.11646/zootaxa.3292.1.1, http://zenodo.org/record/525012
Análise semiótica do clipe This is the new shit, de Marilyn Manson
Analysis of a Marilyn Manson´s videoclip, in conformity to the theoretical principles of Greimas and the Plastic Semiotic´s developed by Floch.Análise de um clipe de Marilyn Manson, baseada nos princípios teóricos de Greimas e da Semiótica Plástica, desenvolvida por Floch
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