1,323 research outputs found
„Innovative identities“? The issue of cultural and linguistic fragmentation in Montagna Friulana (north eastern Italy)
The current globalization realty is characterized by the constant coming up of new identities, that are appearing at any scale,
almost as a side-effect of parallel phenomena signifying increasingly cultural indeterminateness. This paper argues that this
phenomenon is connected to a condition of periphericity, namely to a sense of vulnerability that arise outside the umbrella
once provided by modern state; furthermore this paper argues that this phenomenon is indifferently affecting any culture,
not considering ethnic and linguistic derivation. Such situation figures out a sort of paradox of the globalization, which, while
extending the hegemony of a uniform code, would induce per reaction the flourishing of local cultures, sometimes evidencing
a self-referential character, other times configuring the main stain for a new territorial consciousness
Fig. 1 in Study of some European wild hybrids of Erica L. (Ericaceae), with descriptions of a new nothospecies: Erica nelsonii Fagúndez and a new nothosubspecies: Erica veitchii nothosubsp. asturica Fagúndez
Fig. 1. – Erica ×nelsonii Fagúndez. A. Synflorescence of upper left fragment (typus); B. General view of upper right fragment. [P. F. Hunt 1636, K] [Drawn by the author]Published as part of Fagúndez, Jaime, 2012, Study of some European wild hybrids of Erica L. (Ericaceae), with descriptions of a new nothospecies: Erica nelsonii Fagúndez and a new nothosubspecies: Erica veitchii nothosubsp. asturica Fagúndez, pp. 51-57 in Candollea 67 (1) on page 53, DOI: 10.15553/c2012v671a7, http://zenodo.org/record/576238
Rand, Erica - 2022 Follow Up
Erica Rand is a professor of Arts and Visual Culture at Bates College, an adult figure skater, author and activist. This is a follow-up interview to her previous interview for Querying the Past in 2017. Erica Rand was heavily involved with ACT- UP Portland and more specifically the branch of ACT UP called: Pissed Off Dyke Cell and Women’s Health Action Crew. But more recently she has been involved with a new form of activism through sports and writing. At Bates, she is pushing the importance of trans-inclusion policies in sports and even testing the gender limitations put in place in figure skating.https://digitalcommons.usm.maine.edu/querying_ohproject/1095/thumbnail.jp
Solid-State Spectroscopic Characterization of α-Chitins Deacetylated in Homogeneous Solutions
Controlling water transportation within hydrogels makes hydrogels attractive for diverse applications, but it is still a very challenging task. Herein, a novel type of dually electrostatically crosslinked nanocomposite hydrogel showing thermoresponsive water absorption, distribution, and dehydration processes are developed. The nanocomposite hydrogels are stabilized via electrostatic interactions between negatively charged poly(acrylic acid) and positively charged layered double hydroxide (LDH) nanosheets as well as poly(3‐acrylamidopropyltrimethylammonium chloride). Both LDH nanosheets as crosslinkers and the surrounding temperatures played pivotal roles in tuning the water transportation within these nanocomposite hydrogels. By changing the surrounding temperature from 60 to 4 °C, these hydrogels showed widely adjustable swelling times between 2 and 45 days, while the dehydration process lasted between 7 and 27 days. A swift temperature decrease, for example, from 60 to 25 °C, generated supersaturation within these nanocomposite hydrogels, which further retarded the water transportation and distribution in hydrogel networks. Benefiting from modified water transportation and rapidly alternating water uptake capability during temperature change, pre‐loaded compounds can be used to track and visualize these processes within nanocomposite hydrogels. At the same time, the discharge of water and loaded compounds from the interior of hydrogels demonstrates a thermoresponsive sustained release process
Stadt-Theater Düsseldorf / Die lustigen Weiber von Windsor : Montag, den 7. März 1904: 1. Gastspiel der Königl. Kammersängerin Erica Wedekind von der Königl. Hofoper in Dresden ; komisch-phantastische Oper in 3 Akten mit Tanz
nach Shakespeares gleichnamigem Lustspiel gedichtet von H. S. Mosenthal. Musik von Otto Nicolai. Spielleitung: Oskar Fiedler. Musikalische Leitung: Alfred Fröhlich. Personen: Ernst Winter, Franz Grassegger, Heinrich Gärtner, Anton Passy-Cornet, Ernst Herz, Ernst Bedau, Erica Wedekind als Gast, Elsa Pöhn, Hermine Förster, Hugo Lazak, Karl Linke, Jahn Hofknecht, Wilhelm Buch, Joseph Zanders. Vorkommendes Ballett, arrangiert von Emilie Strigel-Senberg, getanzt von dem BallettpersonalIn Fraktu
Veterinary science : humans, animals and health
This living book is a collection of open access materials bringing scientific papers to a humanities audienc
Interview with Erica Jolly - teacher, author and founding member of SA Social Studies Teachers Association
Erica is a teacher and author who was a founding member of the SA Social Studies Teachers Association (contributing to its text books) and the SA History Teachers Association. She took her Masters in English Literature at Flinders University and taught in Girls and Boys Technical Colleges for 40 years. Erica's published works include a history of vocational education in South Australia from 1897 - 2001, We Came to Marion 1955 - 1995 (1995), A Broader Vision: Voices of Vocational Education in SA (2001), Challenging the Divide: Approaches to Science and Poetry (2010), and Making a Stand (2015)
Trudy and Max Houser Family Collection. 1882-1945 Bulk date: 1941
The Trudy and Max Houser Family Collection comprises material mostly on Max Houser and his brother Ernst Ichenhaeuser. The most prominent topic is Ernst’s planned immigration to the US. Also included are typed and translated copies of letters, sent by Trude Houser’s mother in Germany, 1941. The material includes official documents of Max Houser, correspondence, a timeline, a newspaper article written by Max, and a drawing portraying his father.Folder 2-4: Letters from Germany, 1941, translated and edited by Erica Stux; TimelineMax Houser was born as Max Ichenhaeuser on December 4th, 1892 in Cologne, Germany. His parents were Emma and David Ichenhaeuser. He also had a brother named Ernst who was n’t not able to escape Germany. He was deported to Auschwitz in 1942 and survived the Holocaust. Max himself spent two weeks in Dachau in November 1938. After his release both he and his wife Trudy left Germany and immigrated to the United States, where their daughter Erica was born. Max died on September 17th, 1941.His wife Trudy Houser née Moses was born on July 7th, 1901 and died in May 1982. Her parents Martha and Sigmund Moses died during the war. Her father died of natural causes and her mother died after she was deported to Theresienstadt.Processeddigitize
Employment and wage trends in Oregon's green building and development sector
by Erica Thatcher.Title from PDF caption (viewed on July 13, 2020).Converted from HTML.This archived document is maintained by the State Library of Oregon as part of the Oregon Documents Depository Program. It is for informational purposes and may not be suitable for legal purposes.Mode of access: Internet from the Oregon Government Publications Collection.Text in English
- …
