15 resultados para Simplicity
em University of Michigan
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Item 925
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Shaw and Shoemaker 125
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Mode of access: Internet.
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Pl. nos.: 11546-112, 11546-124, 11782-3.
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"List of the principal books quoted in the editor's additional notes in this volume": v.1, p.9-10; v.2, p.7-8.
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Mode of access: Internet.
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"This discussion of the Torrens system appeared as a series of articles in the Wall street journal." - Prefatory note.
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WorldStarHipHop.com (WSHH) is an online video aggregating website that describes itself as “the premiere online hip hop destination” and a home for “urban media.” Yet, browsing through the site provides little clarity on what constitutes a hip-hop video or urban Internet space because of the disparate video content, the actual racial diversity of the performers, and the website’s generic design. As a result, WSHH’s taglines make a strange claim about the current state of the black musical tradition. Through close readings of the site, this article considers the architecture of this space of interracial exchange and identifies the interface as an example of Modernist architectural simplicity. I argue WSHH’s modular design is flexible enough to include non-black bodies, while remaining a black “urban” space. Thus, the site’s straightforward architecture paradoxically becomes the scaffolding of a much more complex, de-corporealized, and “shareable” blackness.
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I. My summer in a garden. Calvin: a character study. Backlog studies. Baddeck, and that sort of thing.--II. Saunterings.--III. My winter on the Nile.--IV. In the Levant.--V. A roundabout journey.--VI. In the wilderness. How spring came in New England. Captain John Smith.--VII. Being a boy. On horseback. Mexican notes. The Golden Hesperides.--VIII. Studies in the South and West, with Comments on Canada.--IX. Washington Irving. The work of Washington Irving. Our Italy.--X. Their pilgrimage.--XI. A little journey in the world.--XII. The golden house.--XIII. That fortune.--XIV. As we were saying. As we go. Fashions in literature.--XV. Biographical sketch [by T.R. Lounsbury] The relation of literature to life. Simplicity. "Equality." What is your culture to me? Modern fiction. Thoughts suggested by Mr. Froude's "Progress". England. The English volunteers during the late invasion. The novel and the common school. A night in the garden of the Tuileries. The people for whom Shakespeare wrote.
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Shaker Collection: No. 16 (June 21, 1858).
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Smith II:410
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Introductory remarks on the importance of othodoxy[!]--On the negative spirit.--On Mr. Rudyard Kipling and making the world small.--Mr. Bernard Shaw.--Mr. H. G. Wells and the giants.--Christmas and the s̆thetes.--Omar and the sacred vine.--The mildness of the yellow press.--The moods of Mr. George Moore.--On sandals and simplicity.--Science and the savages.--Paganism and Mr. Lowes Dickinson.--Celts and celtophiles.--On certain modern writers and the institution of the family.--On smart novelists and the smart set.--On Mr. McCabe and a divine frivolity.--On the wit of Whistler.--The fallacy of the young nation.--Slum novelists and the slums.--Concluding remarks on the importance of orthodoxy.
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Each vol. has also a distinctive title.