6,656 research outputs found
Det alla missar i debatten om v\ue5r stad
\uc4ntligen – vi har f\ue5tt en arkitekturdebatt i dagspressen! Men var \ue4r de som faktiskt kan n\ue5got? Var \ue4r alla arkitekter, undrar Chalmersprofessorn Lars Marcus
Det alla missar i debatten om vår stad
Äntligen – vi har fått en arkitekturdebatt i dagspressen! Men var är de som faktiskt kan något? Var är alla arkitekter, undrar Chalmersprofessorn Lars Marcus
Reptricket. Förord till Lars Gustafsson: Mot noll
Introduction to a collection of philosophical essays by Swedish author Lars Gustafsson (b. 1936)
Marcus Jensen
Marcus Jensen was the oldest active cowboy in the Basin at the time of his death. He was born in 1883 to Lars and Anna Jensen. He died on June 20, 1963, a few months after this portrait. Marcus began punching cows and working on a ranch when he was 15. He worked for several outfits in Wyoming, Utah and Colorado. He worked from his horse until shortly before his death
Author Functions in Lars Kepler\u27s The Hypnotist: An Analysis
This paper examines Foucault\u27s notion of the author function as it pertains to Lars Kepler\u27s bestselling 2011 crime thriller, The Hypnotist. Lars Kepler is the pseudonym of a Swedish husband-wife writing duo, making him the perfect subject for analysis centering on illusory notion of the author. This paper will answer these questions: Who is the true author of The Hypnotist? What factors influence the author function of this bestelling novel? And what can The Hypnotist phenomenon tell us about the relationships between authors and their readers? This paper will demonstrate that no literary works may be ascribed to an individual person, and that authors hold no privileged knowledge of the works they produce, because authors cease to be authors the moment pen is lifted from page
Environmental crisis, sectoral versus integral: The agency of change: Dialogue
Today we experience and acknowledge the nexus of ecology, culture and politics as a moving objective, defined by local realities placed within global developments. Large-scale change is no longer a distant probability but an approaching condition, which forces us to accept instability and envision sustainability transitions as the ground of future inhabitation. When looking closer into atmospheric, water (riverine, maritime, deltaic), and land systems and their inherent uncertainties we realize the agency that local sensitivities, culture and planning regimes have in defining the success or failure of sustainable development. This dialogue will question what the real ground of preMarsent and future urbanization is, imagining adaptive and transformative change as material and ecologically sensitive practices to site, context and culture.This dialogue is the transcription of the round table talk on the International Forum on Urbanism held in Delft on 26 November 2021. Lars Marcus, Chris Zevenbergen and Carola Hein presented their work in the light of the environmental crisis, sectoral versus integral: the agency of change. With moderator Fransje Hooimeijer they elaborated and related their work in a discussion around the main questions of history, the longue durée, disciplinarity and agency of change.Urban DesignHistory, Form & Aesthetic
EPB880902 Supplemental Material - Supplemental material for Towards analytical typologies of plot systems: Quantitative profile of five European cities
Supplemental material, EPB880902 Supplemental Material for Towards analytical typologies of plot systems: Quantitative profile of five European cities by Evgeniya Bobkova, Meta Berghauser Pont and Lars Marcus: for the ALICE (All-Literature Investigation of Cardiovascular Evidence) Group in Environment and Planning B: Urban Analytics and City Science</p
Marcus Jensen and Leo Thorne
Marcus Jensen are pictured together in a portrait. Marcus Jensen was the oldest active cowboy in the Basin at the time of his death. He was born in 1883 to Lars and Anna Jensen. He died on June 20, 1963, a few months after this portrait. Marcus began punching cows and working on a ranch when he was 15. He worked for several outfits in Wyoming, Utah and Colorado. He worked from his horse until shortly before his death. Leo C. Thorne was born in 1883. In 1906 he began his long career in photography when be began developing film. In 1907 he purchased a small studio. Not only did Leo photograph people, but he traveled the Uinta Basin photgraphing anything and everything. He played an important role in the Uinta Basin by capturing local history through the lens of his camera. Leo was also a civic leader of the community. Leo was married to Pauline Stonecypher. He died in July 1969
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