Brownell, S: The Anthropology of Sport von Susan Brownell, Niko Besnier, Thomas F. Carter
Title: Lorine Niedecker Collected Works Author/Editor: Niedecker, Lorine Publisher: University of California Press Date: 2002 Format: Hardcover Condition: Good Condition Description: Ex-Library copy with typical library marks and stamps. Shelf and handling wear to cover and binding, with general signs of previous use. Wear commensurate with age and use. Clean unmarked interior text. Remnants of sticker visible across rear face of jacket across bar code. Dust jacket wrapped in protective mylar sleeve. Secure packaging for safe delivery.
The Hero’s Journey The heroic efforts of the men and women who write and publish about the West must be celebrated. This year will mark the 10th
Gunite, or concrete shot through a hose, helped to shape twentieth-century modernist architecture, yet its history is largely unwritten. In 1927–29 Richard Neutra pioneered the architectural use of Gunite in the Lovell House in Los Angeles. Frank Lloyd Wright praised Neutra's house, and he later used Gunite with a light steel frame in his Community Church in Kansas City, Missouri (1939–42). In Wright's next public commission, the Solomon R. Guggenheim Museum (1943–59) in New York City, he proposed that the great spiral gallery be wholly of Gunite set on a pre-stressed steel frame, in order to achieve his ideal of plasticity and continuity; the material was used to form the Guggenheim's exterior walls as built. In Seamless Continuity versus the Nature of Materials: Gunite and Frank Lloyd Wright's Guggenheim Museum, Joseph M. Siry narrates the manner in which the design of the Guggenheim's wood formwork, its joints, and the choice of its exterior coating challenged Wright and his collaborators to achieve a form for the spiral that was consistent with his aesthetic ideal.
U, E: Creating the Intellectual - Chinese Communism and the von Eddy U.
The free-living unarmored dinoflagellata /. Berkeley, Calif.University of California Press1921. biodiversitylibrary.org/page/20306986
This historical study traces the process of state-building in Colombia from the struggle for independence, territorial consolidation and reform in the 19th century, to economic development and social and political democratization in the 20th century.