163,157 research outputs found

    Luca Sacher's MM Piano Recital 2

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    Concerto No. 4 in G major, op. 58 by Ludwig van Beethoven Sonata no. 3 for cello and piano by Stefano Sacher Sonata Op. 120, no. 2 in E flat major by Johannes BrahmsRelated performance for this degree -- Luca Sacher's MM Piano Recital 1: https://hdl.handle.net/2346/98522Recital recordings are archival copies for educational purposes only. Members of the TTU community may request to listen/view them for educational purposes via the PDF link to the left

    Luca and Mariano Rubinacci in conversation with G. Bruce Boyer

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    Mariano and Luca Rubinacci of the world-renowned House of Rubinacci discuss the Neapolitan school of tailoring with G. Bruce Boyer, menswear expert, writer, and editor, and co-curator of the Museum at FIT exhibition, Elegance in an Age of Crisis: Fashions of the 1930s. Presented by The Museum at FIT. March 26, 2014.Introduced by Patricia Mears

    Postfazione a Giuseppe Di Luca: "La fede in tempo di pandemia"

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    Il lavoro di Giuseppe Di Luca affronta il tema del rapporto tra religione e pandemia con un approccio sociologico ed empirico. La pandemia ha risollevato un po' ovunque molte questioni rimaste in precedenza sopite, e ha sollecitato il ruolo delle Chiese e delle religioni nell'organizzare le chiusure e nel creare modalità alternative non solo per esercitare il culto, ma anche per garantire il supporto spirituale e materiale ai propri fedeli. Lo studio indaga tutto ciò in un caso particolare, quello del cattolicesimo in una piccola diocesi del Nord d'Italia, la diocesi di Alessandria

    “William Shakespeare, Gianni De Luca e il bubble-gum”

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    Analisi delle versioni shakesperiane di Hamlet, The Tempest e Romeo and Juliet eseguite dall'artista Gianni De Luca nel corso degli anni Settanta. Riflessione sugli adattamenti shakespeariani

    Rich, Sturmian, and trapezoidal words

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    In this paper we explore various interconnections between rich words, Sturmian words, and trapezoidal words. Rich words, first introduced by the second and third authors together with J. Justin and S. Widmer, constitute a new class of finite and infinite words characterized by having the maximal number of palindromic factors. Every finite Sturmian word is rich, but not conversely. Trapezoidal words were first introduced by the first author in studying the behavior of the subword complexity of finite Sturmian words. Unfortunately this property does not characterize finite Sturmian words. In this note we show that the only trapezoidal palindromes are Sturmian. More generally we show that Sturmian palindromes can be characterized either in terms of their subword complexity (the trapezoidal property) or in terms of their palindromic complexity. We also obtain a similar characterization of rich palindromes in terms of a relation between palindromic complexity and subword complexity

    Genealogies of Economic Growth in the Spanish Empire: Back to History

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    Completely overturning this traditional portrait, the authors suggest that during the early modern period Spain, Portugal, Italy, and Latin America indeed took a different path when compared to other European and American countries. However, this divergence was not caused (and therefore cannot be explained) by underdevelopment. Paradoxically, what was common to all former Spanish territories was not “failure” but instead “success.” Local peripheral groups became integrated into (and benefited from) colonial structures, forming larger commercial circuits, purchasing offices and ecclesiastical benefits created or sold by the Monarchy, and participating in wider markets of public debt. Also all these areas shared a relative resilience to the economic downturn, which characterized other Mediterranean countries during the same period. Rather than decaying, Spanish controlled territories blossomed or, so was at least, the situation in the seventeenth century

    RECENT DEVELOPMENTS IN LAND TENURE LAW IN ERITREA, HORN OF AFRICA

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    After a historical sketch of the evolution of land tenure systems in the Eritrean highlands, this paper describes the main features of the new Eritrean land law and its operative assumption that the legislation is meant to extend state control over land. The legal devices employed by the law are widely used in sub-Saharan Africa (and were largely inspired by colonial policies). The State of Eritrea frequently asserts that its recent independence gives it the opportunity to learn from other developing countries' mistakes and to avoid them. The basic patterns of the new land law, however, are common to the rest of Africa, notwithstanding the evident poor results. The central government wants its control to be widespread and pervasive. The fight against traditional social groups controlling land, at least in the highlands, is severe. Apart from a formal repeal of customary law, the state's acquisition of the power to modify village boundaries according to a scheme already completed at higher administrative levels and to introduce equal rights on land for women entails a disruption of the villages' social identity. Mandatory state control over landed property in Eritrea is, as usual, motivated by the necessity to address higher social needs. The ultimate intent, of course, is that the evolution from communal property to state property will eventually result in the widespread introduction of individual property once a sufficient level of economic development is achieved. This unfavorable attitude toward communal property is not supported by the evidence, which shows that, in fact, efficient land management can be obtained through renovation of traditional institutions.Land tenure -- Eritrea, Land tenure -- Government policy -- Eritrea, Land tenure -- Law and legislation -- Eritrea, Customary law -- Eritrea, Tenure types, Traditional -- Eritrea, Land reform -- Eritrea, Land Economics/Use,

    Bonetti, Luca

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    Voce bio-bibliografica dedicata a Luca Bonetti in "Dizionario degli editori, tipografi, librai itineranti in Italia tra Quattrocento e Seicento" coordinato da Marco Santoro ; a cura di Rosa Marisa Borraccini, Giuseppe Lipari, Carmela Reale, Marco Santoro, Giancarlo Volpat

    Luca Quartana : Addio

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    Mostra personale di Luca Quartana: una mostra ponte fra lavoro storico e ricerca poetica sul web

    Verso una nuova architettura. Académie de France e Accademia di San Luca 1750-1800

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    Indagine sui rapporti tra l'accademia di san luca e la Royal Academie de France e confronto tra i concorsi prodotti dalle due accademi
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