Academic literature on the topic 'Daily revolution'

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Journal articles on the topic "Daily revolution"

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Doyle, W. "Daily Life during the French Revolution." French Studies 62, no. 3 (July 1, 2008): 343. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/fs/knn003.

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Cody, Francis. "Daily Wires and Daily Blossoms: Cultivating Regimes of Circulation in Tamil India's Newspaper Revolution." Journal of Linguistic Anthropology 19, no. 2 (December 2009): 286–309. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/j.1548-1395.2009.01035.x.

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Weber, Harold, C. John Sommerville, and Joad Raymond. "The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Daily Information." American Historical Review 103, no. 5 (December 1998): 1589. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2650009.

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Robson, Ann. "The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Daily Information." History: Reviews of New Books 25, no. 4 (July 1997): 159. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03612759.1997.9952887.

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Raymond, Joad, and C. John Sommerville. "The News Revolution in England: Cultural Dynamics of Daily Information." Albion: A Quarterly Journal Concerned with British Studies 30, no. 2 (1998): 297. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/4053554.

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종숙민. "South China-South Seas、The Taiwan Daily、Taiwan Sekimin、Xinhai Revolution." Journal of Seokdang Academy ll, no. 52 (March 2012): 111–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.17842/jsa.2012..52.111.

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Munteanu, Paula, and Laurențiu Ciornei. "The impact of business digitization on the three pillars of sustainable development." Proceedings of the International Conference on Business Excellence 14, no. 1 (July 1, 2020): 343–51. http://dx.doi.org/10.2478/picbe-2020-0033.

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AbstractThe world is currently facing great challenges generated by the fourth industrial revolution. If the first three major industrial revolutions took place over several centuries, the current revolution, in full swing, is characterized by an alert rhythm, having an exponential evolution, rather than a linear one. Many specialists consider that this is a continuation of the third industrial revolution, started in the sixties of the last century, but the permanent need to adapt and change the business models that characterize daily life determines us to appreciate that they represent the elements of a new, unusual revolution, which will greatly change the face of humanity. Digital technology will bring about essential changes in business, social organization and even current governance models. In this sense, we will approach the digitization of the business from the perspective of the three pillars, social, economic and environment, to conclude to what extent, this new and last revolution adheres to the principles of sustainable development. In this study, we aim to analyze the economic links between the digitization of business and sustainable development in Romania, through an econometric analysis. The results of the econometric analysis will determine to what extent the defining elements of sustainable development will be influenced by this phenomenon. Furthermore, we would like undeline that the fourth industrial revolution, by digitizing business, will affect the three pillars of sustainable development, without mitigation measures which the decision makers should consider, amplifying the phenomenon of social inequity, deepening economic imbalances as a result of the polarization of economic activities, concentrated only in certain regions and irreparably affecting the environment and natural balance, becoming a danger to biodiversity conservation.
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Suh, Sungeun. "Fashion Everydayness as a Cultural Revolution in Social Media Platforms—Focus on Fashion Instagrammers." Sustainability 12, no. 5 (March 5, 2020): 1979. http://dx.doi.org/10.3390/su12051979.

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This study qualitatively analyzes the phenomenon of fashion everydayness as a cultural revolution in the digital space as everyday life continues to expand into digital platforms. The analysis proceeded in four perspectives based on Lefebvre’s theoretical framework: the festivalization of everyday life, the artification of everyday life, the holistic stylization of everyday life, and cultural revolution as a daily practice. Instagram, the case for this study and the most popular image-centric social network, leads the digital aesthetics paradigm through creative acts that weave fashion into the daily life of the individual. The study focuses on three fashion mega-influencers whose successful careers began with blogs documenting their daily lives. The analysis showed that Instagram, as a social platform, is a creative space for sharing everyday life with its appropriation of time and space. In there, fashion visualizes the look of the everyday beyond the boundaries of time and space. In practice, it suggests a digital cultural revolution: a composite lifestyle expressive of various tastes and styles—a vital medium to inspire and sustain fashion everydayness. This has implications that the information and communication technology of the digital age created a new cultural space and that daily visualization through fashion will eventually produce sustainable cultural contents.
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Selim, Samah. "Literature and Revolution." International Journal of Middle East Studies 43, no. 3 (July 26, 2011): 385–86. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0020743811000456.

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The three-week uprising in Egypt that ended with the removal of Husni Mubarak on February 11 happened to coincide with the section of my spring course syllabus on the Egyptian novel from Najib Mahfuz to Ahmed Alaidy. As was the case for many of my colleagues and their students, the rapid and awe-inspiring events unfolding daily before us pushed purely academic concerns to the margins of class discussion. This tidal wave of revolutionary politics erupting into the classroom forced me to the realization that my larger syllabus was not simply some neutral or systematic survey of half a century's worth of Arabic literature. I began to think about the largely invisible dystopic intellectual and historical paradigms through which modern Arabic literature is often framed, at least in the United States. The nahḍa/naksa narrative, which compelled many of us to read Arab cultural history of the 20th century as a story of brief “awakening” followed by irredeemable decline and corruption, is clearly no longer tenable in the wake of February 11. This same narrative underpinned the highly self-conscious postmodernism that began to emerge in Egypt in the 1990s and that reached its apogee a couple of decades later at the end of the 2000s, a postmodernism that was celebrated (though by no means universally) as the true beginning of literary modernity and the emancipation of the subject from the dead weight of a past ideological age.
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Knott, Nigel. "A tale of two dentures." Faculty Dental Journal 7, no. 2 (April 2016): 68–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1308/rcsfdj.2016.68.

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While many dentists and their patients have gained enormous benefits from the digital revolution that is transforming our daily lives, the benefits in surgery may not be quite so obvious. Yet. We are nevertheless on the threshold of a dramatic manufacturing revolution in which digitised technology and additive manufacturing have the potential to transform prosthodontics in general and the lives of toothless patients in particular.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Daily revolution"

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Cicero, Michelle Elizabeth. "Rocketing into your daily life : Life magazine, the postwar advertising revolution, and the selling of the United States space program, 1957-1966 /." Electronic version (PDF), 2007. http://dl.uncw.edu/etd/2007-3/cicerom/michellecicero.pdf.

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Shi, Lan Rui Phyllis. "A critical discourse analysis of news reports on the event of the umbrella revolution in China Daily and South China Morning Post." Thesis, University of Macau, 2018. http://umaclib3.umac.mo/record=b3953417.

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Le, Roulley Simon. "Institution et destitution du temps social : socioanthropologie du temps institué et des contre(-)temps révolutionnaires." Thesis, Normandie, 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019NORMC034.

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Cette thèse porte sur la question du temps social comme enjeu stratégique pour les communautés révolutionnaires métropolitaines en France à partir de l'étude de trois d'entre elles localisées à Caen, Rennes et Nantes. Ce travail s'attache à montrer les processus historiques d'institution du temps social et les tentatives visant sa destitution. Il s'engage par un retour epistémo-méthodologique sur la constitution de la sociologie à partir d'une discussion entre Durkheim et Marx. Nous défendons l'hypothèse selon laquelle la discipline se constitue davantage comme une science de l'ordre visant la stabilisation des institutions, puis avec d'autres auteurs nous essayons de dégager les voies d'une sociologie de la destitution qui assume une politique d'intervention. Partant, nous nous employons dans un premier temps (partie 2) à mener une sociologie critique classique basée sur une approche sociohistorique de la domination, en l'espèce une histoire de l'institution du temps social à partir d’une étude du travail, de la vie quotidienne, des rapports de pouvoir. Dans les parties 3 et 4 nous proposons une socioanthropologie de formes-de-vies communistes œuvrant à la fois dans la lutte contre le temps social institué (contretemps révolutionnaires, dimension négative) et affirmant un rapport au temps partant des usages (contre-temps révolutionnaires, dimension positive). L’objectif de cette thèse est de monter la façon dont un horizon post-capitaliste s’expérimente ici et maintenant, la façon dont il prend en charge ou non la question de la domination du temps social institué, la façon, aussi, dont il est réprimé
This thesis deals with the question of social time as a strategic issue for the metropolitan revolutionary communities in France from the study of three of them located in Caen, Rennes and Nantes. This work seeks to show the historical processes of the institution of social time and attempts to destitute it. It begins by an epistemological and methodological return on the constitution of sociology through a discussion between Durkheim and Marx. We defend the hypothesis according to which the discipline is constituted more like a science of the established order aiming at the stabilization of the institutions. Then, with other authors, we try to clear the ways of a sociology of the destitution which undertakes a politics of intervention. Therefore, we begin at first (part 2) to investigate in a classical critical sociology’s way based on a sociohistorical approach of domination – in this case a history of the institution of social time through a study of work, of everyday life and power relations. In parts 3 and 4 we propose a socioanthropology of communist forms-of-life leading at the same time a fight against the instituted social time (revolutionary countertimes, negative dimension) and affirming a relation to the time starting from the activities (revolutionary counter-time, positive dimension). The aim of this thesis is to show how a post-capitalist horizon experiences itself here and now, the way in which it takes over or not the question of the domination of the instituted social time, the way, also, which it is repressed
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Patton, Catherine Marie, and Catherine Marie Patton. "Vermifiltration of Dairy Wastewater for Reuse: The Earthworm Revolution." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625118.

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Wastewater treatment is a problem of great importance to arid climates like the American Southwest, but common processes often require many treatment chemicals and high energy use. The purpose of this project was to design a process to remediate 600,000 gallons/day of wastewater from the Shamrock Dairy treatment plant in Phoenix, AZ. Vermifiltration was chosen as a chemical-free and low energy treatment process to remove BOD, COD, and TSS. A vermifiltration experiment was run confirming high contaminant removal (~85% TOC) in an 8 hour retention time. The process design included solid liquid separation, vermicomposting, cooling, and vermifiltration. A full economic and environment analysis was done, leading to the recommendation that the process be built without the solid liquid separation and vermicomposting, and that research on worm species such as the Indian Blue Worm (Perionyx excavates) be done to investigate their ability to remediate wastewater in the 25-30°C temperature range for reduced cooling requirements. With these improvements the process would be an economically sustainable and very environmentally friendly solution for remediation of dairy waste water.
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Stuffle, Calliandra Suzanne, and Calliandra Suzanne Stuffle. "Vermifiltration of Dairy Wastewater for Reuse: The Earthworm Revolution." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 2017. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/625174.

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The viability of using vermifiltration to remediate wastewater from a dairy processing plant to City of Phoenix disposal requirements was investigated. Contaminant species of concern were COD, BOD, and TSS. Vermifiltration uses a packed bed reactor with an active layer of worms and compost, where worms and associated microbes decompose contaminants from the wastewater. A pilot scale vermifiltration unit was built to investigate the feasibility of using Red Wiggler worms (Eisenia fetida) to treat wastewater from Shamrock Farms dairy processing plant. Approximately 80% of total organic carbon was removed from the wastewater in a 24 hour time period, while the experiment had not reached steady state. Projected removal of organic carbon at steady state matches literature values of over 90% removal. A full scale process was designed to remediate 600,000 gallons per day of wastewater onsite at the dairy processing plant. This optimized process includes an inlet stream heat exchanger to reduce the temperature to worm operating conditions and six vermifiltration beds with in-situ cooling. Water leaving the system meets disposal requirements. As designed, this process is not economically viable. Further research into species of worms with higher operating temperatures and heat dissipation methods could make this process economically sustainable.
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Kahlisch, Thomas, Julia Dobroschke, and Nicole Puder. "Die Zukunft Barrierefrei – Blindenbüchereien als Schrittmacher der digitalen Revolution?!" Deutsche Zentralbücherei für Blinde zu Leipzig (DZB), 2009. https://slub.qucosa.de/id/qucosa%3A807.

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Die in MEDIBUS organisierten Blindenbüchereien sehen sich als Partner der kommerziellen Verlagswelt und nicht als deren Konkurrenten. Die sehr geringen Auflagenhöhen und die speziellen Anforderungen bei der Aufbereitung von Literatur in Brailleschrift und Großdruck wecken in aller Regel nur wenig verlegerisches Interesse. Die wachsende Auswahl an mobilen Endgeräten, Medienkonvergenz und Diversifikation von Angeboten sind Chancen der digitalen Revolution, die es ermöglichen, auch Menschen mit speziellen Bedürfnissen zeitnah und in adäquater Qualität Wissen zugänglich zu machen. libreka! und die DZB kooperieren im Projekt „Leibniz – Sach- und Fachbuchaufbereitung für Blinde und Sehbehinderte“, um PDF- und Satzdaten zu verarbeiten und deren digitale Verbreitung sowohl für sehende als auch für nichtsehende Leserinnen und Leser zu forcieren. DAISY-Standards und -Technologien sind dabei der Schlüssel zum Erfolg.
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Kahlisch, Thomas, Julia Dobroschke, and Nicole Puder. "Die Zukunft Barrierefrei – Blindenbüchereien als Schrittmacher der digitalen Revolution?!" Saechsische Landesbibliothek- Staats- und Universitaetsbibliothek Dresden, 2010. http://nbn-resolving.de/urn:nbn:de:bsz:14-qucosa-38285.

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Die in MEDIBUS organisierten Blindenbüchereien sehen sich als Partner der kommerziellen Verlagswelt und nicht als deren Konkurrenten. Die sehr geringen Auflagenhöhen und die speziellen Anforderungen bei der Aufbereitung von Literatur in Brailleschrift und Großdruck wecken in aller Regel nur wenig verlegerisches Interesse. Die wachsende Auswahl an mobilen Endgeräten, Medienkonvergenz und Diversifikation von Angeboten sind Chancen der digitalen Revolution, die es ermöglichen, auch Menschen mit speziellen Bedürfnissen zeitnah und in adäquater Qualität Wissen zugänglich zu machen. libreka! und die DZB kooperieren im Projekt „Leibniz – Sach- und Fachbuchaufbereitung für Blinde und Sehbehinderte“, um PDF- und Satzdaten zu verarbeiten und deren digitale Verbreitung sowohl für sehende als auch für nichtsehende Leserinnen und Leser zu forcieren. DAISY-Standards und -Technologien sind dabei der Schlüssel zum Erfolg.
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Chvíla, Jakub. "Pohled polského denního tisku na události spojené se sametovou revolucí." Master's thesis, 2018. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-373722.

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1 Abstract (in English) The aim of this diploma thesis is the discourse analysis of polish daily newspapers' portrayals of the so-called Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia in the last days of 1989. I have focused the analysis on following sources of articles: the articles from the Trybuna Ludu, Życie Warszawy and the polish press agency PAP, Gazeta Wyborcza and Chicago based newspapers of polish community Dziennik Związkowy. Theoretic part is composed of the history of analyzed period, the characterization of the polish media market in the 80s and the theory of propaganda, newspeak and media discourse. In the practical part of this thesis there is the media discourse analysis of the content of the chosen articles. Keywords (in English) Velvet Revolution, Daily Newspapers, Poland, Czechoslovakia, Media Image of the World, Propaganda
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Chvíla, Jakub. "Pohled polského denního tisku na události spojené se sametovou revolucí." Master's thesis, 2017. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-265132.

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(in English) The aim of this diploma thesis is the discourse analysis of polish daily newspapers' portrayals of the so-called Velvet Revolution in Czechoslovakia in the last days of 1989. I have focused the analysis on every category of newspapers, which were officially published in Poland at that time. The selected questions are analyzed according to methods, which are mentioned in the theoretical part of this thesis, and everything is set into a historical context. Theoretic part is composed of the history of that period, the characterization of the polish media market in the 80s and the theory of propaganda, newspeak and discourse. In the practical part of this thesis there is the analysis which was made by the quantitative and qualitative method. The chief contribution is the determination of the exact quantity of the articles in monitored daily newspapers, the analysis of selected topics and the answers on the selected questions related to the role of propaganda, the differences (state vs. independent media; polish vs. american-polish newspapers; regional newspapers from northern Poland vs. southern Poland) among the articles in selected newspapers and the theme-orientation articles in the newspapers intended for soldiers, Catholics or teenagers. The main intention of the practical part is to...
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Dekastello, Petr. "Družstevnictví jako jeden z možných nástrojů ekonomického konceptu Steady-State." Master's thesis, 2020. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-415271.

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The thesis analyzes the theory of Steady-State Economy based on a research of literature as well as principles and starting points for its application in practice. The central question revolves around the viability of the theory. First, however, the thesis focuses on the context, i.e. the background and needs for the emergence of this theory. Thus, the research begins at a time of industrial revolution and the rise of modern economies. In the course of the research, the analysis also points out the phenomenon of cooperatives, which arise in the early days of industrialization, as examined at the start of the work. Later, after a comprehensive introduction of the steady-state economy theory, the thesis returns to cooperatives, as during the research certain parallels in both of the phenomena emerge. Consequently, the conclusion recapitulates and examines whether steady state economy has been proven to be viable, what could support its functioning and whether one of the answers might be cooperatives - considered they have been shown to realize certain assumptions of this economic theory in practice. After a review of criticism of both of the phenomena, a final evaluation and decision may be reached, i.e. the research questions may be answered.
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Books on the topic "Daily revolution"

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Daily life during the American Revolution. Milwaukee, WI: World Almanac Library, 2006.

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1947-, Volo James M., ed. Daily life during the American Revolution. Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press, 2003.

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The news revolution in England: Cultural dynamics of daily information. New York: Oxford University Press, 1996.

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The world of the American Revolution: A daily life encyclopedia. Santa Barbara, California: Greenwood, 2015.

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The invention of the silicon chip: A revolution in daily life. Chicago, Ill: Heinemann Library, 2002.

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Ruffolo, Jennifer. TMDLs: The revolution in water quality regulation. Sacramento, Calif. (900 N. St., Suite 300, Sacramento 94237-0001): California State Library, California Research Bureau, 1999.

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Koppelaar, Rembrandt, and Willem Middelkoop. The Tesla Revolution. NL Amsterdam: Amsterdam University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789462982062.

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Though oil prices have been on a downward trajectory in recent months, that doesn't obscure the fact that fossil fuels are finite, and we will eventually have to grapple with the end of their dominance. At the same time, however, skepticism about the alternatives remains: we've never quite achieved the promised 'too cheap to meter' power of the future, be it nuclear, solar, or wind. And hydrogen and bio-based fuels are thus far a disappointment. So what does the future of energy look like? The Tesla Revolution has the answers. In clear, unsensational style, Willem Middelkoop and Rembrandt Koppelaar offer a layman's tour of the energy landscape, now and to come. They show how rapid technological advances in batteries and solar technologies are already driving large-scale transformations in power supply, while economic and geopolitical changes, combined with a growing political awareness that there are alternatives to fossil fuels will combine in the coming years to bring an energy revolution ever closer. Within in our lifetimes, the authors argue, we will see changes that will reshape economics, the balance of political power, and even the most mundane aspects of our daily lives. Determinedly forward-looking and optimistic, though never straying from hard facts, The Tesla Revolution paints a striking picture of our global energy future.
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Cuba in the shadow of change: Daily life in the twilight of the revolution. Gainesville, Fla: University Press of Florida, 2009.

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Vaneigem, Raoul. The revolution of everyday life. 2nd ed. [London?]: Rebel Press/Left Bank Books, 1994.

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Hidden Cuba: A photojournalist's unauthorized journey to Cuba to capture daily life--50 years after Castro's revolution. Ocala, Fla: Atlantic Publishing Group, 2010.

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Book chapters on the topic "Daily revolution"

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Stumpe, Bent. "The ‘Touch Screen’ Revolution." In From Physics to Daily Life, 103–16. Weinheim, Germany: Wiley-VCH Verlag GmbH & Co. KGaA, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1002/9783527687039.ch05.

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Hart, Emma. "Daily Lives Dislocated? Routine and Revolution in Britain's North American Colonies." In Daily Lives and Daily Routines in the Long Eighteenth Century, 190–209. New York: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9780429317583-13.

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Gold, Marina. "Conceptualizing Change in the Cuban Revolution." In Methodological Approaches to Societies in Transformation, 89–111. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-65067-4_4.

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AbstractThis paper will consider two levels within the study of the Cuban revolution: the meta-narratives of change and continuity that determine the academic literature on Cuba and inform political positioning in relation to the revolution, and the methodological challenges in understanding how people in Cuba experience change and continuity in their daily life. Transformation and continuity have been the two dominant analytical tropes used to interpret Cuban social and political life since the overthrow of the Batista regime in 1959. For Cuban scholars and politicians, a focus on change in reference to what was Cuba’s reality before the Revolution is a continuous concern and a powerful discursive mechanism in redefining and reinvigorating the revolutionary project. Simultaneously, in periods of crisis throughout the 62 years since the revolution, the capacity to demonstrate continuity with revolutionary principles while developing new mechanisms to redefine the political project has ensured the revolution’s subsistence. Conversely, continuity and change are also harnessed by critics of Cuba’s current regime to articulate the ever-imminent collapse of socialism in the region. Change has been their main focus of concern during critical historic moments that affected the trajectory of the Cuban revolutionary project. From this perspective, change embodies a promise of progress and implies a movement toward liberal democracy and a pro-US foreign policy, while continuity denotes failure, stagnation, and repression. At the core of the analysis of change in Cuba lies a concern with the nature of the state. Ethnographic data reveals the partialities and contradictions people experience in their daily life and across time. Two elements of ethnographic experience are particularly informative: life histories that span across the revolutionary period, and generational conflicts surrounding political issues. I will focus on the life history of key informants and the generational conflicts that surround their experience, a well as their material contexts (their neighborhood, their house, their job), all of which help to elucidate the complexities of studying change within a permanent revolution.
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Dueck, Gunter. "Revolution! Es geht los! Bücher können in virtuelle Rechte umgetauscht werden! (DD141, Mai 2011)." In Cut & Paste-Management und 99 andere Neuronenstürme aus Daily Dueck, 95–96. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-43390-4_42.

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"Chapter 8. A Revolution in Daily Life." In Industry and Revolution, 200–232. Harvard University Press, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.4159/harvard.9780674074330.c8.

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"XXXVI. The Revolution and Daily Life." In The Russian Revolution, Volume II, 335–58. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400858705-020.

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Barley, Stephen R. "What is a Technological Revolution?" In Work and Technological Change, 1–24. Oxford University Press, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198795209.003.0001.

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Almost daily we are told how some new technology will revolutionize in our lives. The truth of the matter is most technologies do not. However, occasionally a new technology does appear which provides the grounding for gradual changes that eventually transform our systems of production and the way we live our lives. Historically, we speak of these developments as technological revolutions. By focusing on how such technologies change the nature of work, occupational structures, and systems of production, this chapter attempts to answer two questions: “What is a technological revolution?” and, more importantly, “How do current technologies associated with artificial intelligence fit into the history of technological change?”
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"10. Daily News: The Bulletin des Amis de la Vmté." In The Cercle Social, the Girondins, and the French Revolution, 245–70. Princeton University Press, 1985. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/9781400854974.245.

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"Appendix 3. The Truth about the Struggle to Seize the Power of the Tibet Daily Newspaper Office." In On the Cultural Revolution in Tibet, 191–96. University of California Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/9780520942387-016.

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Machado, Adelaide, and Júlio Rodrigues da Silva. "Representations of the World and Alterity in the Global Daily World as Read Through the Press." In The Cultural Revolution of the Nineteenth Century. I.B.Tauris, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9780755695119.ch-009.

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Conference papers on the topic "Daily revolution"

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Azimova, Alina Mihailovna. "TRENDS IN SOCIETY'S PERCEPTION OF DIGITAL TECHNOLOGIES." In Russian science: actual researches and developments. Samara State University of Economics, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.46554/russian.science-2020.03-1-338/342.

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The article is devoted to the analysis of the impact of the digital revolution on the development of mankind. The author considers the consequences of digitalization in two aspects: in the biological and social aspects, provides specific examples that confirm the hypotheses derived. studied the impact of digitalization on the daily life of man.
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Koeppen, Ryan, Meghan E. Huber, Dagmar Sternad, and Neville Hogan. "Controlling Physical Interactions: Humans Do Not Minimize Muscle Effort." In ASME 2017 Dynamic Systems and Control Conference. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/dscc2017-5202.

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Physical interaction with tools is ubiquitous in functional activities of daily living. While tool use is considered a hallmark of human behavior, how humans control such physical interactions is still poorly understood. When humans perform a motor task, it is commonly suggested that the central nervous system coordinates the musculo-skeletal system to minimize muscle effort. In this paper, we tested if this notion holds true for motor tasks that involve physical interaction. Specifically, we investigated whether humans minimize muscle forces to control physical interaction with a circular kinematic constraint. Using a simplified arm model, we derived three predictions for how humans should behave if they were minimizing muscular effort to perform the task. First, we predicted that subjects would exert workless, radial forces on the constraint. Second, we predicted that the muscles would be deactivated when they could not contribute to work. Third, we predicted that when moving very slowly along the constraint, the pattern of muscle activity would not differ between clockwise (CW) and counterclockwise (CCW) motions. To test these predictions, we instructed human subjects to move a robot handle around a virtual, circular constraint at a constant tangential velocity. To reduce the effect of forces that might arise from incomplete compensation of neuro-musculo-skeletal dynamics, the target tangential speed was set to an extremely slow pace (∼1 revolution every 13.3 seconds). Ultimately, the results of human experiment did not support the predictions derived from our model of minimizing muscular effort. While subjects did exert workless forces, they did not deactivate muscles as predicted. Furthermore, muscle activation patterns differed between CW and CCW motions about the constraint. These findings demonstrate that minimizing muscle effort is not a significant factor in human performance of this constrained-motion task. Instead, the central nervous system likely prioritizes reducing other costs, such as computational effort, over muscle effort to control physical interactions.
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Tenorio, Gabriela de Souza. "Better places for a liveable-and lively- city. A method of Post-Occupancy Evaluation of public spaces." In 55th ISOCARP World Planning Congress, Beyond Metropolis, Jakarta-Bogor, Indonesia. ISOCARP, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.47472/pgpu3582.

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Public spaces that attract and retain diverse people are crucial to foster urbanity and tolerance, and build stronger and livelier communities, especially in big cities. The simple coexistence of similarities and differences in public spaces can, to say the least, validate our own essence and offer us a possibility of growth. Sharing the same space with other people – even without interacting with them – favors social learning. Theory suggests that thought, feeling and behavior can be altered by observation. The search for public spaces that make urbanity viable is desirable in any society (especially in more unequal societies, as one can find in developing countries). However, inspired by ideas built on the critique of great urban agglomerations after the Industrial Revolution, cities around the world have undergone transformations that did exactly the opposite. As a series of lifeless places began to emerge, several researchers tried to figure out why this was happening. These researchers found that just wanting to create a lively place was not enough. It was necessary to scrutinize the behavior of people in public spaces in order to understand the relationship between their configuration and use. The knowledge they have built has been largely responsible for the increasing concern with public spaces and their relation to public life since the 1960s. Cities around the world are realizing that empty places could be full of people, and that not only a place full of people is something positive, but an empty place is not. They are learning to see underused public spaces as social, cultural, environmental, and financial waste. However, even with so much information available, it is still possible to find, in any contemporary city, public spaces that fail to support public life. Frequently, little or nothing is done to make them safer or more attractive, diverse and pleasant. It is even more worrying to realize that such places continue to be created. This is the focus of this paper. It brings together available knowledge and experiences in the area of public space design. It also complements, structures and translates such experiences and knowledge into a Public Space Post-Occupancy Evaluation Method, which stresses the importance of observing people and their activities. As a result, one can better understand, observe, assess and, thus, manipulate the main attributes of a public space that may influence its capacity to attract and retain diverse people on a daily basis. The method is offered as a tool to support those who deal with public spaces at different levels – from academic studies to municipal management. It has been used in Brasilia, Brazil, for the past 7 years, with positive results in governmental decision-making processes. A case study is briefly presented to illustrate its use.
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