2,135 research outputs found
An Interview with Tony David Sampson: Author of Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks
Tony D. Sampson is Reader in Digital Culture and Communication in the School of Arts and Digital Industries (ADI) at the University of East London, where he directs the EmotionUX lab, supervising research on the cognitive, emotional, and affective aspects of user experience. In 2013, he co-founded Club Critical Theory, an organization dedicated to the application of critical theory in everyday life in Southend-on-Sea, Essex. Tony is the author of Virality: Contagion Theory in the Age of Networks and The Assemblage Brain: Sense Making in Neuroculture, both from the University of Minnesota Press. He blogs at viralcontagion.wordpress.com.
The editors of this special NANO issue are delighted to have the opportunity to talk with Tony about how his work touches on issues of imitation and contagion—a loaded term unpacked within his 2012 book
Aktifitas nelayan tradisional Indonesia di wilayah perairan australia berdasarkan KHL 1982 / oleh Tony Setiawan
Konvensi Hukum Laut 1982 (KHL 1982) merupakan sumber hukum internasional dalam dunia hukum laut. Oleh karena itu setiap perjanjian atau peraturan yang ada tidak boleh bertentangan dengan KHL 1982, demikian pula halnya dengan MOU 1974 yang mengatur tentan aktifitas serta pelaksanaan dari hak perikanan tradisional (TER) nelayan-nelayan tradisional Indonesia yang sudah secara tradisi melakukan aktifitasnya di wilayah perairan australia . Meskipun MOU 1974 telah dibuat 8 tahun lebih awal dibandingkan pembuatan KHL 1982 akan tetapi ketentuan-ketentuan dalam MOU 1974 tidak boleh bertentang dengan ketentuan-ketentuan yang terdapat dalam KHL 1982, yang telah diratifikasikan oleh kedua negara
Tony Tulathimutte: 48th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Tony Tulathimutte is the author of Private Citizens and Rejection. A graduate of Stanford University and the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, he’s received a Whiting Award and an O. Henry Award, was longlisted for the National Book Award, and has written for The Paris Review, N+1, The New York Times, Playboy, The Nation, and others. He also runs CRIT, a writing class in Brooklyn
Tokyo Burning Interview with Tony Barnstone
Interview with Tony Barnstone about adapting his poetry to music. Tokyo\u27s Burning is a CD that tells history from the inside, telling stories of the Pacific theater of WWII not from the God\u27s eye view but from the points of view of American and Japanese civilians and soldiers who lived and suffered through Pearl Harbor and Iwo Jima, the firebombing of Tokyo and the atom bomb drop on Hiroshima. Songs in the CD are based upon 15 years of research into the Pacific theater of WWII by Tony Barnstone—poet, author, and professor at Whittier College in Los Angeles. Tony worked with oral histories, histories, diaries, letters, and memoirs, and did his own interviews with vets and their families to write a book of poems titled Tongue of War: From Pearl Harbor to Nagasaki (BkMk Press, 2009). Though many of the songs deal with atrocity—sex slavery, torture, internment camps, even cannibalism—the CD itself is meant to take a neutral stance, allowing each character to speak his or her view, without judgment, assuming that the readers will find their own moral paths through these competing voices and viewpoints. As one character says, Seems everyone has a point of view, but no one has perspective. L.A.-based songwriters John Clinebell and Ariana Hall, who work together under the name Genuine Brandish, were commissioned by Tony to work with him to translate his book into 15 songs (with the essential help of producer Andrew Bush). What if history had a human face? What if the people who lived history could speak to it? This CD is an attempt to amplify the smaller voices, the human voices, of those who lived through the war and help them to sing history to us
Tony Ardizzone, 3rd Annual ODU Literary Festival
From the training grounds of Chicago and Bowling Green, Tony Ardizzone serves as running guard for the creative writing program at ODU. Author of a novel ( In the Name of the Father ) and a collection of short stories ( Idling ), he is also the editor of Intro, an annual journal of the best writing from college workshops around the country. In a nearly completed accompanying volume to In the Name of the Father, Ardizzone traces the route by which the character Vito Scaparelli reaches Vietnam. Ardizzone has published 15 short stories in distinguished fiction quarterlies. He believes that the writing of fiction is the crafting of interiorized drama
Improving urban planning: the case of New South Wales. by Tony Sorensen
tag=1 data=Improving urban planning: the case of New South Wales. by Tony Sorensen
tag=2 data=Sorensen, Tony
tag=3 data=Policy,
tag=4 data=8
tag=5 data=2
tag=6 data=Winter 1992
tag=7 data=31-36.
tag=8 data=PLANNING
tag=10 data=The NSW Department of Planning is proposing changes to the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act. The author reviews the proposals and highlights the difficulties of making urban planning efficient and equitable.
tag=11 data=1992/4/10
tag=12 data=92/0672
tag=13 data=CABThe NSW Department of Planning is proposing changes to the Environmental Planning and Assessment Act. The author reviews the proposals and highlights the difficulties of making urban planning efficient and equitable
Tony Ardizzone, 12th Annual ODU Literary Festival
Tony Ardizzone, former Director of Creative Writing at Old Dominion University from 1979-1987, now teaches at Indiana University. He is the author of two novels, In the Name of the Father, 1978, and Heart of the Order, 1986, which was awarded the 1985 Virginia Prize for Fiction and named by The National Sports Review as one of the ten best sports books of 1986. He has also published a collection of short stories, The Evening News, 1986, which won the Flannery O\u27Connor Award. His stories have been cited twice in Best American Short Stories and been given Prairie Schooner\u27s Lawrence Foundation Award and the Black Warrior Review Fiction Prize. He is a member of the Board of Directors of the Associated Writing Programs
Tony Woodman et Jonathan Powell (Ed.), Author and Audience in Latin Literature
Tordeur Pol. Tony Woodman et Jonathan Powell (Ed.), Author and Audience in Latin Literature. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 63, 1994. pp. 382-383
A Moderate Move or Missing the Point? A Response to Tony Moon's 'J. H. King's Theology of Religions: 'Magnanimous Optimism?'
AbstractThis article is a response to Tony Moon's scholarly charge that this author has overstated his case regarding Bishop J. H. King's Pentecostal theology of religions. Dr Moon urges a more moderate move, but I respectfully argue that he is missing my point regarding King's theology of religions as at its core characterized by optimism, that is, by a positive and balanced but non-dogmatic sense of hopefulness.
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Policing serious public disorder: the search for principles, policies and operational lessons. [In two volumes]
The paper examines the influence of central government on the police response to serious public disorder; the effectiveness or otherwise of the law and the way in which it is used by the police in their response to such disorder, and searches for sone principles which need to be followed if the police are to maintain the general support of the communities in which they are required to act. Some comparisons are made, and differences highlighted, between the police commander in his response to serious public disorder, once it has broken out, and the military commander in battle. But, guided by lessons from history, the paper principally concentrates on the environment in which the operational police commander is required to act in responding to actual or potential serious public disorder, pointing out that he is dependant for his success on firstly, an effective system of command and control; secondly, on an intelligence system which feeds relevant and accurate information on which he can make sound and informed decisions; and thirdly, the physical resources, e.g. personnel and equipment, and the approved tactics which enable him to restore public tranquility once disorder has broken out. But before he can use the physical resources effectively, he must have a sound strategy for dealing with actual or potential disorder
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