978 resultados para Shades and shadows


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Mode of access: Internet.

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Added t.-p., engr.

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Added t.p., illustrated.

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Publisher's advertisement: 2 p. (at end of v. 2 ).

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pt. 1. Use of instruments, lettering, geometrical problems and projections. -- pt. 2. Problems in descriptive geometry, shades and shadows, and perspective. -- pt. 3. Working drawings.

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-[pt. I] Mechanical drawing, by E. Kenison. Shades and shadows, by H. W. Gardner. Perspective drawing, by W. H. Lawrence. Freehand drawing, by H.E. Everett. Pen and ink rendering, by D. A. Gregg. Rendering in wash, by H. V. von Holst. Architectural lettering, by F. C. Brown.- [pt. 2] - Mechanical drawing, by E. Kenison. Working drawings, machine design, by C. L. Griffin. Sheet metal pattern drafting, tinsmithing, practical problems in mensuration, by W. Neubecker.

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[pt.I] Mechanical drawing, by E. Kenison. Shades and shadows, by H. W. Gardner. Perspective drawing, by W. H. Lawrence. Pen and ink rendering, by D. A. Gregg. Architectural lettering, by F. C. Brown.-- pt.II Working drawings, by C. L. Griffin. Mechanism [by] W. H. James. Machine design, by C. L. Griffin. Sheet metal pattern drafting, tin-smithing, by W. Neubecker.

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"September 1995."

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This paper explores the politics of feminist criticism of the Fifty Shades novels as seen in both traditional media commentary and popular online news and cultural websites and blogs. I argue that much media commentary, in broadsheet and other ‘respectable’ outlets particularly, has featured avowedly feminist writers dismissing the books as ‘bad’, not only containing bad writing and bad sex but, ultimately, as being bad for their women readers. Situating these responses within a history of feminist discomfort with popular erotic and romantic fiction marketed to women I read these responses as a form of ‘anti-romantic’ fantasy in which the reader/critic is able to assert both her immunity from the romantic fantasy offered in the text and her cultural distance from those women who are subject to it. Further, this act of disavowal is often linked to a professed concern for the women who read the novel who the critic argues will, inevitably, replicate the abusive and harmful relationship dynamics that the novel represent. Such a move then positions the feminist critic as not only more culturally intelligent than women readers of the novel but enacts a fantasy of respectable, middle-class feminist cultural custodianship. Such a fantasy, I argue, is connected to the post-feminist era in which we live, which has produced a class of self-appointed ‘feminist’ cultural critics who seek to contest their own cultural marginalisation through enacting a governmental authority to worry about other women. This paper, therefore, is a critical investigation of the pleasures and politics of very publicly not reading Fifty Shades and its significance for analysing the contemporary politics of popular culture and feminism.