32,309 research outputs found

    Urbane Wunder

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    Ausstellungskatalog zu "Urbane Wunder", Remise Bludenz, 2010 Wer glaubt denn heute noch an Wunder? Und was sind "urbane Wunder"? - Diesen Fragen geht transparadiso in der Ausstellung "Urbane Wunder" nach, und hat dazu KünstlerInnen/ UrbanistInnen/ ArchitektInnen/ KulturproduzentInnen aus verschiedenen kulturellen Kontexten eingeladen, ihre persönlichen Erfahrungen und Beispiele von Wundern, die sich im öffentlich-urbanen und gesellschaftspolitischen Raum abspielen, zu zeigen. Mit Beiträgen von Michael Askin, Community Museum Project, Céline Condorelli, Teddy Cruz, feld72, Osservatorio Urbano/ Lungomare, Public Works, Jens Emil Sennewald, Allan Siegel, SMAQ, Gerald Straub, transparadiso, Georg Winte

    Michael Rodriguez interviews fiction writer Michael Kimball

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    Author Michael Kimball talks about moving away from Michigan to become a successful writer, his education, the fiction reading series he has started in Baltimore, the life-story-on-postcard project, and his book "Dear everybody." Kimball is interviewed by Michigan State University Librarian Michael Rodriguez for the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series

    Michael Feldbusch, Der Brief Alexanders an Aristoteles über die Wunder Indiens. Synoptische Edition

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    Bodéüs Richard. Michael Feldbusch, Der Brief Alexanders an Aristoteles über die Wunder Indiens. Synoptische Edition. In: L'antiquité classique, Tome 46, fasc. 1, 1977. pp. 252-253

    Michael Rodriguez interviews author Paul Clemens

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    Author Paul Clemens talks about his book "Made in Detroit," the genre of memoir, and writing about race. Clemens is interviewed by Michigan State University Librarian Michael Rodriguez for the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Held in the MSU Main Library

    Michael Rodriguez interviews author Tom Springer

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    Author Tom Springer is interviewed about his writing career and his newest book "Looking for hickories". Springer talks about his career following after earning an Environmental Journalism degree from Michigan State University. He calls his genre "creative non-fiction" and explains how he weaves his memories into his books about life in rural and wild Michigan. Part of the Michigan State University Libraries' Michigan Writers Series. Springer is interviewed by Librarian Michael Rodriguez

    Michael Rodriguez interviews author Gary Gildner

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    Author Gary Gildner explains why he left his tenured teaching position to move to Idaho to became a full-time writer of poetry. Gildner talks about donating his personal papers to Michigan State University Libraries' Special Collections, his writing style and how he approaches writing. Gildner is interviewed by MSU Librarian Michael Rodriguez for the MSU Libraries' Michigan Writer Series. Held at the MSU Main Library

    Ikone: das Wunder in Chonai

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    Das Wunder in Chonai: der hl. Mönch Archippos steht vor einem Kirchenbau und wendet sich zum Erzengel Michael, der mit seiner Lanze die Gewässer durchbohrtPhotograph Collection of the Department of Art History (http://difab.univie.ac.at/

    Ikone: das Wunder in Chonai

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    Das Wunder in Chonai: der hl. Mönch Archippos steht vor einem Kirchenbau und wendet sich zum Erzengel Michael, der mit seiner Lanze die Gewässer durchbohrtPhotograph Collection of the Department of Art History (http://difab.univie.ac.at/

    Gold standard of UK degrees is lost in translation

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    Inflated marks, overworked staff and politically compromised courses are the price of exploiting offshore UK registered students, says Michael Day

    The laws of terrorism: Representations of terrorism in German literature and film

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    Representations of the reasons and actions of terrorists have appeared in German literature tracing back to the age of Sturm und Drang of the 18th century, most notably in Heinrich von Kleist's Michael Kohlhaas and Friedrich Schiller's Die Räuber, and more recently since the radical actions of the Red Army Faction during the late 1960s and early 1970s, such as in Uli Edel's film, The Baader Meinhof Complex. By referring to Walter Benjamin's system of natural law and positive law, which provides definitions of differing codes of ethics with relation to state laws and personal ethics, one should be able to understand that Michael Kohlhaas, Karl Moor, and the members of the RAF are indeed represented as terrorists. However, their actions and motives are not without an internal ethics, which conflicts with that of their respective state-sanctioned authorities. This thesis reveals the similarities and differences in motives, methods, and use of violence in Schiller, Kleist, and representations of the RAF and explores how the turn to terrorism can arise from a logical realization that ideologies of state law do not align with the personal sense of justice and law of the individual
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