Academic literature on the topic 'Black Forest culture'

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Journal articles on the topic "Black Forest culture"

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Chornobrov, O., and V. Solomakha. "Robinia pseudoacacia L. — an important introduced tree species in protective stands of forest-agrarian landscapes of Ukraine." Balanced nature using, no. 2 (April 27, 2023): 69–76. http://dx.doi.org/10.33730/2310-4678.2.2023.282750.

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The article analyzes the importance of black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia L.) in forest-agricultural landscapes of Ukraine. As a result of cultivation and invasion black locust became part of the landscape of a number of European countries, in particular Ukraine, as well as a component of culture and economy, including cultural and historical heritage. In some European countries, this tree species is economically important and is used to obtain commercial wood and firewood, biomass for energy needs, honey, also used to prevent erosion, in greening of populated areas, phytoremediation of contam
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LOVAPINKA, CHARISTA, AKHMAD FAUZI, and RIZAL BAHTIAR. "Economic valuation on conversion impact of mangrove area for fish farming in Tambaksumur Village, Karawang, West Java." International Journal of Bonorowo Wetlands 4, no. 1 (2014): 58–69. https://doi.org/10.13057/bonorowo/w040105.

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Abstract. Lovapinka C, Fauzi A, Bahtiar R. 2014. Economic valuation on conversion impact of mangrove area for fish farming in Tambaksumur Village, Karawang, West Java. Bonorowo Wetlands 4: 58-69. Profitable business of brackishwater black tiger shrimp and milkfish pond culture in Karawang Regency have triggered the excessive conversion of mangrove forest areas into brackishwater pond areas. This conversion result negatively impacts the household incomes and the environment since mangrove forests have a strategic role for life, such as a source of human needs, shelter, spawning and food source
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Olgovskіy, S. Ya. "NON-FERROUS MTNALWORKING AND NOMADIC CULTURE OF THE NJRTHERN BLACK SEA CIMMERIAN." Archaeology and Early History of Ukraine 41, no. 4 (2021): 170–75. http://dx.doi.org/10.37445/adiu.2021.04.13.

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The article attempts to trace the development of non-ferrous metalworking traditions in the Northern Black Sea region in the early Iron Age and to correlate them with changes in the ethnic composition of the region. In the IX century BC. The first nomads appeared in the steppe zone, who used metal rods with stirrup-like ends. In the VIII century BC. BC comes a new wave of nomads, who in the decoration of horses were two-ringed rods. Along with the emergence of these nomads there are significant changes in the lives of the local population. First of all, the agricultural tribes of the Belozersk
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Rapatskaya, Yanina. "Russian Forest Metal: The Image of the Forest in Russian Atmospheric Black Metal." Communications. Media. Design 9, no. 4 (2024): 152–67. https://doi.org/10.17323/cmd.2024.24401.

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The image of the forest serves as a key symbol in atmospheric black metal, through which an important connection with the past is facilitated, a crucial component of this music genre's conceptual essence, and a unique attitude towards nature is conveyed, one that is often juxtaposed with culture. However, for bands from Russia, the forest also represents an ethnoscape, a significant part of national identity. Moreover, some Russian projects further complicate this stereotype by converting it into a political statement, aimed at an ecological issue pertinent to both global and local narratives.
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Zemri, Rahma, Zohra Fortas, Gérard Chevalier, and Soulef Dib. "Mycorrhizal synthesis of Algerian holm oak (Quercus ilex L.) with Perigord black truffle (Tuber melanosporum Vitt.)." Brazilian Journal of Animal and Environmental Research 8, no. 1 (2025): e77641. https://doi.org/10.34188/bjaerv8n1-090.

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The Perigord black truffle (Tuber melanosporum Vitt.) is an edible hypogeous mushroom most cultivated in the world for its gastronomic value, its taste aroma and its economic importance. Truffle cultivation does not exist in Algeria and no study has been undertaken on the introduction of its cultivation. Mycorrhizal synthesis was carried out in a greenhouse by inoculating, in vivo on a soilless culture substrate, Algerian Quercus ilex seedling with spores of Perigord black truffle. Mycorrhization significantly improves aerial growth and root system of inoculated holm oak seedlings. The formati
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Vítková, Michaela, Marco Conedera, Jiří Sádlo, Jan Pergl, and Petr Pyšek. "Gefährlich und nützlich zugleich: Strategien zum Management der invasiven Robinie." Schweizerische Zeitschrift fur Forstwesen 169, no. 2 (2018): 77–85. http://dx.doi.org/10.3188/szf.2018.0077.

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Dangerous and useful at the same time: management strategies for the invasive black locust The North American black locust (Robinia pseudoacacia) is considered controversial as many other introduced tree species because of its both positive and negative properties. Based on a literature review and own data we analyze the occurrence of black locust in Czechia and Switzerland and present the management approaches in place. In both countries, black locust is on the blacklist of invasive introduced species. It can grow in a wide range of habitats from urban and agricultural landscape to dry grassl
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Vasileva, Elmira V. "THE TOPOS OF THE FOREST IN N. HAWTHORNE’S “THE SCARLET LETTER”." IKBFU's Vestnik. Series: Philology, Pedagogy, Psychology, no. 2 (2025): 51–64. https://doi.org/10.5922/vestnikpsy-2025-2-5.

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The article explores the symbolism of the forest in N. Hawthorne’s “The Scarlet Letter.” This study aims not only to interpret the meanings associated with this topos but also to illus­trate its role in developing three internal plots within the novel. A brief overview of the for­est’s reception as a symbolic space in European culture reveals four primary interpretations: the forest as a source of materials and resources, the forest as hell, the forest as paradise, and the forest as a frontier — a space for the hero’s initiation. This analysis of “The Scarlet Let­ter” through the lens of liter
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Olszewski, Adam, and Piotr Włodarczak. "Święte 11: Cemetery of the Corded Ware Culture." Baltic-Pontic Studies 23, no. 1 (2018): 7–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/bps-2018-0001.

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Abstract The rescue excavations at site 11 in Święte, Radymno Commune, Jarosław District, were conducted prior to the construction of the A4 motorway. Thirteen Corded Ware culture (CWC) features, including eleven graves, were discovered. The Final Eneolithic cemetery was placed in the neighbourhood of FBC graves, possibly at megalithic tombs. Most of the CWC graves have a niche construction – typical of the Lesser Poland funerary rite. The furnishings found in these features are characteristic of Subcarpathia as are inventories from nearby sites in the Lower San Valley and Rzeszów Foothills. T
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Widiarsih, S., and I. Dwimahyani. "Induced mutation on Indonesian black orchid (Coelogyne pandurata Lindley) in-vitro culture by gamma irradiation." IOP Conference Series: Earth and Environmental Science 1160, no. 1 (2023): 012001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1755-1315/1160/1/012001.

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Abstract The black orchid (Coelogyne pandurata Lindley) is one of the native Indonesian orchid species. In its natural habitat, its existence is threatened by continuous forest exploitation. Coveted in the global market for hybridization purposes, the black orchid is still considered difficult to be grown in cultivation and may take years to flower. Its conservation and breeding may be carried out through a combination of tissue culture and mutagen application, as induced mutation may increase genetic variation. This experiment aims to investigate the effects of different levels of gamma irrad
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Olhovskyi, Serhii. "Cimmerians – to the Issue of Determining the Carriers of Culture. Historiographic Aspect." Bulletin of Kyiv National University of Culture and Arts. Series in Museology and Monumental Studies 3, no. 1 (2020): 61–74. https://doi.org/10.31866/2617-7943.3.1.2020.205323.

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Purpose of the study. Cimmerians are the first ethnonym known in Ukraine. Interesting pages of the history not only of Ukraine but also the countries of Asia Minor and the Caucasus are connected with the Cimmerians, which makes the people an indicator of the historical situation in these regions to a certain extent. At the same time, the questions of the origin and the disappearance of this people remain unclear, as well as their identification with archaeological cultures of the early Iron Age, which determines the relevance of this topic. Research methodology the article
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Black Forest culture"

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Bolzenius, Sandra M. "The 1945 Black Wac Strike at Ft. Devens." The Ohio State University, 2013. http://rave.ohiolink.edu/etdc/view?acc_num=osu1385398294.

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Meyer, Michel. "Contribution a l'etude de la structure et de l'organisation du rna-2 (isolat s) et des rna satellites de 5 isolats du tbrv." Université Louis Pasteur (Strasbourg) (1971-2008), 1986. http://www.theses.fr/1986STR13091.

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La sequence de l'arn-2 de l'isolat s comporte une seule phase de lecture ouverte qui correspond a une proteine de p. M. 150 k. La proteine de la coque est localisee dans la region c terminale de la proteine 150 k. Une proteine "de diffusion" se situerait en amont de la proteine de la capside. Les sequences des arn satellites issus d'isolats appartenant aux serotypes s (s et l) et g (g, e et c) comportent toutes une seule phase de lecture ouverte correspondant a une proteine de 48 k. La comparaison des sequences permet de distinguer 2 groupes: les arn s et l d'une part, les arn g, e et c, d'aut
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Forney, Andra. "Patterns of harvest: investigating the social-ecological relationship between huckleberry pickers and black huckleberry (Vaccinium membranaceum Dougl. ex Torr.; Ericaceae) in southeastern British Columbia." Thesis, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/1828/7286.

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For centuries the wellbeing of rural communities has depended on the health and resilience of local food systems. Over the last century many factors have contributed to declines in the availability and use of important traditional foods. In this thesis I have used black huckleberry (Vaccinium membranaceum) as a case study through which I explore the varying roles humans play in influencing the health of a wild forest food. Black huckleberry is one of the most sought after wild berries in British Columbia (BC). Over the past few decades huckleberry pickers and forest managers have expressed con
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Books on the topic "Black Forest culture"

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Hidalgo, Javiera Jaque, and Miguel A. Valerio. Indigenous and Black Confraternities in Colonial Latin America. Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463721547.

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Employing a transregional and interdisciplinary approach, this volume explores indigenous and black confraternities –or lay Catholic brotherhoods– founded in colonial Spanish America and Brazil between the sixteenth and eighteenth century. It presents a varied group of cases of religious confraternities founded by subaltern subjects, both in rural and urban spaces of colonial Latin America, to understand the dynamics and relations between the peripheral and central areas of colonial society, underlying the ways in which colonialized subjects navigated the colonial domain with forms of social o
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Werner, Kalow, Goedde H. W, Agarwal Dharam P, and Boehringer Ingelheim Fonds, eds. Ethnic differences in reactions to drugs and xenobiotics: Proceedings of a meeting held in Titisee, Black Forest, Federal Republic of Germany, October 3-6, 1985. Liss, 1986.

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Schwartz, Mimi. Good neighbors, bad times: Echoes of my father's German village. University of Nebraska Press, 2007.

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Schwartz, Mimi. Good neighbors, bad times: Echoes of my father's German village. University of Nebraska Press, 2009.

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Schwartz, Mimi. Good neighbors, bad times: Echoes of my father's German village. University of Nebraska Press, 2009.

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Burford, Mark. Gospel Singing as Black Popular Culture. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190634902.003.0004.

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Gospel music was integral to the culture of many black churches, but gospel singing offered pleasures to its practitioners and fans that extended beyond musical worship. In the late 1940s, Jackson’s career was interwoven with two phenomena that nudged black gospel singing toward the realm of popular culture: the “song battle” and the high-profile programs of religious music presented at Harlem’s Golden Gate Auditorium by promoter Johnny Myers. Pitting Jackson against such rivals as Roberta Martin and Ernestine Washington, the battle of song offered gospel singers alternate forms of prestige an
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Keeling, Kara. Queer Times, Black Futures. NYU Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18574/nyu/9780814748329.001.0001.

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Contestations over “the future” and “futurity” have been central to formulations of time throughout the twentieth century and into the twenty-first. Queer Times, Black Futures considers the implications of scholarly, artistic, and popular investments in the promises and pitfalls of imagination, technology, futurity, and liberation that have persisted in Euro-American culture. Of specific interest are those Afrofuturist cultural forms and logics through which creative engagements with Black existence, technology, space, and time might be accessed and analyzed.Punctuated throughout by meditation
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Cabrera, Lydia. La foret et les dieux. religions afro-cubaines et medecine sacrée a cuba. Jean-Michel Place, 2003.

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Hörmann, Raphael, and Gesa Mackenthun, eds. Human Bondage in the Cultural Contact Zone. Transdisciplinary Perspectives on Slavery and Its Discourses. Waxmann Verlag GmbH, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31244/9783830973751.

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Slavery – the subjection of some human beings to a state of bondage by other, more powerful, people – has been an accepted social institution since ancient times. It is less well known that slavery has also produced cultural contact zones in forcing members of different cultures into sharing the same places – whether in private households, on plantations, in mines and quarries, or indeed the same imaginative sites in works of art and public memory. The recent commemorations of the abolition of the transatlantic slave trade by Britain (1807) and the United States (1808), as well as the rise of
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Smith, Marlon A. Reshaping Beloved Community. The Rowman & Littlefield Publishing Group, 2018. https://doi.org/10.5040/9781978730656.

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Reshaping Beloved Community: The Experiences of Black Male Felons and Their Impact on Black Radical Traditions offers a reflexive interrogation on the history of black male incarceration in the United States starting in the nineteenth century to both illustrate the complex ways black male felons have been discursively constructed and the various techniques utilized in the United States to erase the contributions of black male felons and their black radical projects. This erasure has left many black men without the benefit of fellowship and community. Therefore, Reshaping Beloved Community focu
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Book chapters on the topic "Black Forest culture"

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Roberts, Nicole. "Past Histories and Present Realities: The Paradox of Time and the Ritual of Performance in Mayra Santos Febres’ Fe en disfraz." In Chronotropics. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-32111-5_4.

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AbstractIn her short historical novel Fe en disfraz (2009), Mayra Santos Febres uses re/presentations of time to re-invoke historical memory and to illuminate the ways in which black women’s lives were eclipsed from the Puerto Rican landscape. The novel offers a bold examination of the consequences of sexual exploitation and abuse on black women during enslavement, a topic which is under-explored in Puerto Rican and Latin American narrative. The intersection between the past and present that occurs through the unraveling of the narrator Fe’s life story reveals how the historical forces that sh
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Schreg, Rainer. "Development and abandonment of a cultural landscape — Archaeology and environmental history of medieval settlements in the northern Black Forest." In Ruralia. Brepols Publishers, 2009. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.ruralia-eb.3.1180.

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Tumino, Stephen. "9. Twin Peaks." In Thinking Blue / Writing Red. Open Book Publishers, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.11647/obp.0324.09.

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Chapter Nine ("Twin Peaks"): In this chapter I address the question why Twin Peaks was "happening again" in 2017 after twenty-five years. To do so I read it against the socioeconomic and ideological background of the last quarter century. The original series first aired during the early years of the neoliberal period of global capitalism heralded by neoconservative and Reagan administration functionary Francis Fukuyama as the "end of history." What that meant in neoliberal sociology was the superiority of "free markets" over the ideological driven politics of the past. In cultural theory, clas
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Plainer, Zsuzsa. "Segregated Schools, “Slow Minds” and “Must Be Done Jobs”: Experiences About Formal Education and Labour Market in a Roma Community in Romania." In Social and Economic Vulnerability of Roma People. Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-52588-0_3.

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AbstractBased on a long-term ethnographic fieldwork, this study applies the cultural-ecological theory to understand reasons for making and maintaining a segregated school in a Romanian town, and those community forces which track and maintain Roma children there. As findings indicate, creating and sustaining such an institution reflects the flipsides of Romanian national policies, which due to the financing strategies and centralized curricula—involuntarily—block the chances to provide quality education to marginal groups. Tracking and staying of Roma children into such schools is a result of
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Eriksen, Thomas Hylland, and Martina Visentin. "Threats to Diversity in a Overheated World." In Acceleration and Cultural Change. Springer International Publishing, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-031-33099-5_3.

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AbstractMost of Eriksen’s research over the years has somehow or other dealt with the local implications of globalization. He has looked at ethnic dynamics, the challenges of forging national identities, creolization and cosmopolitanism, the legacies of plantation societies and, more recently, climate change in the era of ‘accelerated acceleration’. Here we want to talk not just about cultural diversity and not just look at biological diversity, but both, because he believes that there are some important pattern resemblances between biological and cultural diversity. And many of the same force
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Roberts, Patrick. "Tropical Forests Natural History, Diversity, and Potentiality as Theatres of Human Adaptation and Negotiation." In Tropical Forests in Prehistory, History, and Modernity. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198818496.003.0006.

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The above quote by the German poet, novelist, and painter Herman Hesse highlights the cultural significance of forests in nineteenth- and twentieth-century western culture as the ‘natural’ contrast to growing urban populations and industrial expansion. Hesse’s focus on the ‘ancient’ element of these environments is certainly valid in a tropical context, given that tropical forests are some of the oldest land-based environments on the planet, existing for over one thousand times longer than Homo sapiens (Upchurch and Wolf, 1987; Davis et al., 2005; Ghazoul and Shiel, 2010; Couvreur et al., 2011
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Lopa, Christopher Joseph. "Local Boy, East Coast Sensibilities." In Beyond Ethnicity. University of Hawai'i Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.21313/hawaii/9780824869885.003.0009.

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This chapter was written from the perspective of a Hawaii resident who identifies as Black and local. My upbringing is explored including the cultural forces that shaped me and the impact that the portion of my upbringing on the East Coast has had on rounding out my Black worldview. This chapter also address challenges to the growth of the Hawaii based African American community including a lack of education about the pre and post-missionary presence of Blacks in Hawaii, the geographic isolation, the transient nature of the State’s largest portion of the Blacks: Service Members in the United S
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Parker, John. "Northern Frontiers." In In My Time of Dying. Princeton University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691193151.003.0018.

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This chapter recounts the early life and death of Gandah, a naa or 'chief', of Birifu, a dispersed settlement of traditional mud-walled compounds located near the bank of the Black Volta River in the northwestern corner of the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast. It narrates the final stages of Gandah's life as a renowned healer and accumulator of ritual 'medicines'. The chapter investigates how Gandah's story encapsulated key themes in the history of death and the dead in the Northern Territories in the first half of the twentieth century. This was a region that was in many ways quite dist
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Herzberg, Judith Townes. "Hegemonic Forces." In Black Women Navigating Historically White Higher Education Institutions and the Journey Toward Liberation. IGI Global, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4018/978-1-6684-4626-3.ch008.

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Like so many Black female academics, the author's career path through the university system has been impeded by racism. Despite its claims to promote diversity, historically white higher educational institutions inevitably reflect the attitudes of the culture at large. Indeed, these universities and colleges are whiter than the American population. After years of hegemonic inequalities in job opportunities, wealth, health, housing, and education, many Black people are filtered out. The presence of full-time Black faculty members in higher education is undermined by the numbers themselves. The
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"Eldridge Cleaver: “Education and Revolution”." In Schlager Anthology of Black America. Schlager Group Inc., 2021. https://doi.org/10.3735/9781935306627.book-part-220.

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In November 1969, Eldridge Cleaver’s essay “Education and Revolution” was published in The Black Scholar, a progressive journal that offered a Black perspective on such issues as education, culture, and politics. Cleaver at the time was a member of the Black Panther Party, a militant revolutionary organization founded earlier in the decade. The initial goal of the Black Panthers was to promote self-defense in the Black community at a time when many urban Blacks saw police forces as oppressive and racist. In time, the Black Panthers broadened their goals to include charitable work, principally
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Conference papers on the topic "Black Forest culture"

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Кузнецова, Т. М. "TO THE PROBLEM OF CONTACTS BETWEEN GREEKS AND BARBARIANS OF THE NORTH BLACK SEA REGION." In Hypanis. Труды отдела классической археологии ИА РАН. Crossref, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.25681/iaras.2021.978-5-94375-350-3.131-146.

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Исследование материальной и духовной культуры скифов, а также вы яснение времени и характера взаимоотношений кочевников с другими народами про водятся по данным археологических и письменных источников. Даты археологических памятников определяются по входящим в состав сопроводительного инвентаря ве щам – хронологическим маркерам, среди которых имеются зеркала. В Северном Причерноморье и на Северном Кавказе для эпохи бронзы не выявле ны ни «импортные» зеркала, ни очаги местного производства этих предметов. «Скифские» и греческие зеркала в культуре местного населения были инновацией, связанной с
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Rucins, Adolfs, Aivars Aboltins, Iaroslav Gadzalo, et al. "Technology efficiency of biological control of plum pests by complex microbial preparation." In 24th International Scientific Conference Engineering for Rural Development. Latvia University of Life Sciences and Technologies, Faculty of Engineering and Information Technologies, 2025. https://doi.org/10.22616/erdev.2025.24.tf022.

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In the article the research results are presented on the efficiency of a biological control technology of plum trees, infected with the dominant plum pests, using a complex microbial preparation. The preparation was based on microbial strains with fungicidal (Pseudomonas aureofaciens) and insecticidal (Streptomyces avervitilis) properties, which were stored in the Microbial Culture Collection of the Engineering Technological Institute “Biotekhnika” of the National Academy of Agrarian Sciences of Ukraine. Both microbial strains were cocultured on a liquid growth medium for the complex microbial
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Vargas, Emiliano. "Médiatisation et métamorphose dans la culture musicale. Des jams de jazz aux jams de black music à Buenos Aires." In Actes du congrès de l’Association Française de Sémiotique. Université de Limoges, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.25965/as.8450.

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L'article décrit les caractéristiques du processus de métamorphose de l'identité de la jam session en tant que forme de vie dans la sémiosphère en se basant sur l'étude d'un circuit de jam de black music situé dans la ville de Buenos Aires. L'article rend compte des changements dans la dynamique de la médiatization dus à la transition numérique et de certaines de ses conséquences au niveau culturel. L'hypothèse suggère que les possibilités d'interaction offertes par la transition numérique affectent les affordances musicales qui constituent le type de performance des formes de vie étudiées. L'
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AMIROV, Marat, Igor SERZHANOV, Farid SHAYKHUTDINOV, and Nicolay SEMUSHKIN. "MAIN DIRECTIONS OF DEVELOPMENT OF SPRING WHEAT PRODUCTION AGRICULTURAL TECHNOLOGIES FOR SUSTAINABLE ARABLE FARMING IN THE FOREST-STEPPE BELT OF THE MIDDLE VOLGA REGION." In RURAL DEVELOPMENT. Aleksandras Stulginskis University, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.15544/rd.2017.254.

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The article presents results of studies of influence of controlled and environmental factors on production process of different varieties of spring wheat carried out in different soil and climatic conditions of Middle Volga region. The forest-steppe area of the Volga region is one of regions of Russia favorable for spring wheat growing by its natural and climatic conditions. Unbalance of nutrition elements in soil, acid soil and predominantly heavy-textured soil hamper the yield growth. Out of all factors vital for plants (light, heat, moisture and nutrition elements) under consideration, prov
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Hogrefe, Jeffrey, and Scott Ruff. "Connecting to the Archive: Counter-gentrification in Central Brooklyn." In 110th ACSA Annual Meeting Paper Proceedings. ACSA Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.110.78.

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Weeksville was founded in 1838 by formerly enslaved persons and freedmen who sought to create a self-sustaining utopian community in Brooklyn, New York. Distinguished by its urbanity, size, and relative physical and economic stability, the community provided sanctuary for self-emancipated persons from Southern slave plantations, and for free Black people escaping the violence of New York City’s Draft Riots in 1863. The second largest African American community in the U.S. was absorbed by the forces of real estate development in New York City. After almost fifty years of community led persisten
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Perkunić, M., N. Stanković, T. Sekulić, A. Momčilović, and M. Saulić. "ČAČALICA: GREEN PERSPECTIVE OF POŽAREVAC CITY." In IX Regional Conference Industrial Energy and Environmental Protection in the Countries of Southeast Europe. Society of Thermal Engineers of Serbia,, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.46793/ieep24.332p.

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Čačalica is a hill with the area of 26.6 hectars (203 m above the sea level) situated on the southeast outskirts of the city of Požarevac. Memorial Park Čačalica is a man-made „oasis of nature“ amidst the urban and agricultural surroundings, and it has been regarded as one of city’s icons for many years. Cultural and historical significance of this Memorial Park make its preservation imperative. This research presents the phytocenological assessment of section „V“, also known as the „Black pine section“, one of 24 forested sections in Čačalica. Based on the data obtained by the phytocenologica
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Živaljić, Nikolina, Ivan Balić, Hrvoje Smoljanov, Boris Trogrlić, and Ante Munjiza. "SEISMIC ANALYSIS OF DRY STONE MASONRY STRUCTURES WITHIN THE DIOCLETIAN'S PALACE IN SPLIT." In 3rd Croatian Conference on Earthquake Engineering. University of Zagreb Faculty of Civil Engineering, 2025. https://doi.org/10.5592/co/3crocee.2025.57.

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A large number of cultural heritage buildings, especially in the Mediterranean area, belong to dry masonry stone structures. In order to be able to make decisions about possibly necessary rehabilitation techniques and to preserve them for future generations, it is necessary to have insight into their behaviour due to expected actions, the most destructive of which is an earthquake. As part of this work, an assessment of the seismic resistance of four dry stone masonry structures in the old centre of Split in Croatia was carried out: the bell tower of the Cathedral of Saint Domnius, the colonna
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Stevens, Jonathan K. "Access + Opportunity = Empowerment: Overcoming Impostor Syndrome Through Hands-on Material Exploration." In 112th ACSA Annual Meeting. ACSA Press, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.35483/acsa.am.112.74.

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Equitable access to deeper learning1 is essential to the discipline of architecture. But what happens when opportunities are stifled in an evolving architectural education? This qualitative research reviews the role a theoretical process plays in empowering upper-division Historically Black College and University (HBCU) architecture students to engage in mate-rial-based architectural learning to help reduce impostor syndrome in a post-pandemic digital culture. HBCU students, like 84 percent of university students across the United States2, were part of the ‘Covid-19 remote learning’ generation
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Low, Jen YF. "Forgiveness Meditation: Mindful Self-Healing." In 7th International Conference on Spirituality and Psychology. Tomorrow People Organization, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.52987/icsp.2022.004.

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Abstract Rising like lotus blooms from bloodied war-torn devastation and muddied destitution of war crimes, divided societies and imperialistic ravages of Western colonialism, the two Indochina nations of Vietnam and Cambodia have shown amazing power of resurgence in less than 50 years. In many regional league tables, Vietnam notably, have even pulled ahead to show amazing achievements in GDP and education. What has happened seems like a distant past today. What are the unique cultural roots of this human resilience and socio-economic dynamism? At an individual level, it is not often that post
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Reports on the topic "Black Forest culture"

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Baldwin, Richard. PR-015-084508-R01 Contaminants in Sales Gas Pipelines Sources Removal and Treatment. Pipeline Research Council International, Inc. (PRCI), 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.55274/r0010029.

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The objective of this project is to provide information about a problem material found in gas pipelines called "black powder". It is a mixture or a chemical compound of iron sulfides, iron oxides, dirt, sand, salts, chlorides, water, glycols, hydrocarbons and compressor oils, mill scale, or other materials. The most common constituents, iron compounds of sulfur or oxygen, are corrosion products. In addition to chemical formation, black powder can be formed by microbes normally found in gas pipelines. This material causes machinery, measurement, and pipeline maintenance problems. This research
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Lischer-Katz, Zack, Rashida Braggs, and Bryan Carter. Investigating Volumetric Video Creation and Curation for the Digital Humanities: a White Paper Describing Findings from the Project: Preserving BIPOC Expatriates’ Memories During Wartime and Beyond. The University of Arizona Libraries, 2024. http://dx.doi.org/10.2458/10150.674673.

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Volumetric video capture technologies offer humanities scholars and other researchers new, immersive ways of engaging with historical and cultural knowledge for research and pedagogical purposes; however, the high cost of this technology and a paucity of expert knowledge in the field have limited its adoption. In particular, volumetric video offers rich new possibilities for recording, preserving, and re-experiencing BIPOC (Black, indigenous, and other people of color) stories in immersive detail, which have been underrepresented in the historical record. This technology is still experimental
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