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1

Kunc, Karen. Fractured terrain. Blue Heron Press, 2011.

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2

Barry, John Willard. Off-site movement of Bacillus thuringiensis spray applied to complex forested terrain. USDA Forest Service, Forest Pest Management, 1991.

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3

Barry, John Willard. Off-site movement of Bacillus thuringiensis spray applied to complex forested terrain: 1992 phase. U.S. Dept. of Agriculture, Forest Service, Forest Pest Management, 1992.

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4

Flageollet, Jean Claude. Les mouvements de terrain et leur prévention. Masson, 1989.

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5

Cato, Sophie. Inventaire des documents concernant les ravinements et les mouvements de terrain dans les Pyrénées Orientales. Les Amis du Centre de géographie physique Henri Elhaï, 1986.

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6

Cederlöf, Gunnel, and Willem van Schendel. Flows and Frictions in Trans-Himalayan Spaces. Amsterdam University Press, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.5117/9789463724371.

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Flows and Frictions in Trans-Himalayan Spaces traces movements and connections in a region known for its formidable obstacles to mobility. Eight original essays and a conceptual introduction engage with questions of networks and interconnection between people across a bordered landscape. Mobility among the extremely varied ecologies of south-western China, Myanmar and north-eastern India, with their rugged terrain, high mountains, monsoon-fed rivers and marshy lowlands, is certainly subject to friction. But today, harsh political realities have created hard borders and fractured this trans-Himalayan terrain. However, the closely researched chapters in this book demonstrate that these borders have not prevented an abundance of movements, connections and flows. Mobility has always coexisted with friction here, but this coexistence has been unsettled, giving this space its historical shape and its contemporary dynamism. Introducing the concept of the ‘corridor’ as an analytical framework, this collection investigates mobility and flows in this unique socio-political landscape.
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7

Phillips, Liza. Terrain. Liza Phillips, 1998.

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8

contributor, O'Toole Sean 1968, ed. Terrain. Tf Editores, 2013.

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9

Brown, Dale. Fatal terrain. HarperCollins, 1997.

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10

Leydier, Michel. Terrain piégé. Hachette, 2014.

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11

Ortmann, Günther, and Arnold Windeler, eds. Umkämpftes Terrain. VS Verlag für Sozialwissenschaften, 1989. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-663-14291-1.

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12

1959-, Weber Joanna, Holly Johnson Gallery (Dallas, Tex.), and Galveston Arts Center, eds. Altered terrain. Holly Johnson Gallery, 2007.

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13

Laura, Brueck, ed. Unclaimed terrain. Navayana Publishing, 2013.

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14

Myers, Lynn Scott. Susceptible terrain. L.S. Myers, 1996.

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15

Brown, Dale. Fatal terrain. s.n.], 1998.

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16

Danchin, Émilie. Terrain connu. Yellow Now, 2011.

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17

J, Bugeja Michael, and Weare Andrea M, eds. Unmapped terrain. Cleaveland House Books, 2008.

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18

Biewener, Andrew A., and Shelia N. Patek, eds. Movement on Land. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198743156.003.0004.

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Animals must support their weight when moving over land, while also accommodating changes in terrain and substrate conditions. Most terrestrial animals accomplish this by using limbs to exert forces on the ground. Some groups have lost their limbs (snakes) or never evolved them in the first place (worms), relying instead on contractions of body muscles to transmit force between their body axis and the ground. Undulatory modes of terrestrial locomotion are frequently associated with a burrowing existence. In other animals, some combination of body undulation and limb propulsion moves the body forward. In this chapter we focus on the mechanisms and strategies for legged locomotion on land. Recent studies have examined how animals maneuver and accelerate, and how they stabilize body movements when running. A large body of work on terrestrial locomotion has also yielded inspiration for a new generation of legged robots that can move nimbly over irregular terrain than previous robot designs.
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19

Ross, Stephen J. Invisible Terrain. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198798385.001.0001.

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In his debut collection, Some Trees (1956), John Ashbery poses a question that resonates across his oeuvre and much modern art: “How could he explain to them his prayer / that nature, not art, might usurp the canvas?” When Ashbery asks this strange question, he joins a host of transatlantic avant-gardists—from the Dadaists to the 1960s neo-avant-gardists and beyond—who have dreamed the paradoxical dream of turning art into nature. Invisible Terrain examines Ashbery’s poetic mediation of this fantasy, reading his work alongside an array of practitioners, from Wordsworth to Warhol, as an exemplary case study of avant-garde transvaluation of Western nature aesthetics. Ashbery takes his coordinates from a constellation of British, American, and continental European poetic and visual art practices—from romantic nature poet John Clare’s presentational immediacy to the French “New Realism” movement’s “direct appropriation of the real” in the early 1960s—that share an emphasis on somehow transforming the material of art into a “second nature.” Nature, as Ashbery and his company understand it, is a vanguard horizon, a metaphor for art, that which lies beyond “art as we know it.” The fact that the artist can never realize this aesthetic fiction—which overturns what we generally mean by “art” and “nature”—makes it all the more powerful as a tool for staking out the limits of art. In chronicling Ashbery’s articulation of “a completely new kind of realism,” Invisible Terrain tells the larger story of nature’s transformation into a resolutely unnatural aesthetic resource in twentieth-century art and literature. But in documenting Ashbery’s eventual turn against this avant-garde tradition—most conspicuously in his archive of campy, intentionally “bad” nature poems—the project also registers queer resistance to the normative concept of nature itself as a governing conceit for art. The story begins in the late 1940s with the Abstract Expressionist valorization of process, surface, and immediacy—summed up by Jackson Pollock’s famous quip, “I am Nature”—that so influenced Ashbery’s early quest for transparent, anti-mimetic modes of composition. It ends with “Breezeway,” a poem about Hurricane Sandy and climate change. Along the way, Invisible Terrain documents Ashbery’s strategic literalization of the stream-of-consciousness metaphor, his pastoral dispersal of the lyric subject during the politically fraught Vietnam era, and his investment in “bad” nature poetry.
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20

Osterkamp, Tom. Detector Dogs and Scent Movement: How Weather, Terrain, and Vegetation Influence Search Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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21

Osterkamp, Tom. Detector Dogs and Scent Movement: How Weather, Terrain, and Vegetation Influence Search Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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22

Osterkamp, Tom. Detector Dogs and Scent Movement: How Weather, Terrain, and Vegetation Influence Search Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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23

Osterkamp, Tom. Detector Dogs and Scent Movement: How Weather, Terrain, and Vegetation Influence Search Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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24

Detector Dogs and Scent Movement: How Weather, Terrain, and Vegetation Influence Search Strategies. Taylor & Francis Group, 2020.

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25

Crowe, Brenda. Playgroup Movement. Taylor & Francis Group, 2014.

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26

Playgroup Movement. Routledge, 2014.

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27

Crowe, Brenda. Playgroup Movement. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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28

Crowe, Brenda. Playgroup Movement. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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29

Crowe, Brenda. Playgroup Movement. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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30

Crowe, Brenda. Playgroup Movement. Taylor & Francis Group, 2013.

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31

The Playgroup Movement. Routledge, 2007.

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32

Lee, Butch, and Red Rover. Night-Vision: Illuminating War and Class on the Neo-Colonial Terrain. Vagabond Pr, 2000.

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33

Lee, Butch. Night-Vision: Illuminating War and Class on the Neo-Colonial Terrain. Kersplebedeb, 2017.

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34

Smith, R. Drew. From Every Mountainside: Black Churches and the Broad Terrain of Civil Rights. State University of New York Press, 2014.

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35

C. G. Jung and the Dead: Visions, Active Imagination and the Unconscious Terrain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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36

Stephens, Stephani L. C. G. Jung and the Dead: Visions, Active Imagination and the Unconscious Terrain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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37

Stephens, Stephani L. C. G. Jung and the Dead: Visions, Active Imagination and the Unconscious Terrain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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38

Stephens, Stephani L. C. G. Jung and the Dead: Visions, Active Imagination and the Unconscious Terrain. Taylor & Francis Group, 2019.

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39

Mohamed Fathy Hassan.* El-Maghraby. Use of geodetic methods in detecting terrain movements with special reference to the global positioning system. 1991.

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40

Fellows, Chris. Total Skiing. Human Kinetics, Champaign, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781718219502.

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What type of skier are you? What are your strengths? What are your weaknesses? How can you improve your skills and your downhill experience? Total Skiing was developed specifically to help you answer those questions. Author and renowned ski instructor Chris Fellows shares his proven pyramid program for assessing skills and creating your skiing profile. Step by step, you’ll identify exercises to enhance those skills and create a personal training program to improve functional movement, including stability and mobility, ski-specific fitness, essential ski techniques, and tactics for performance on all terrains. Total Skiing also includes sample programs for each skier type that offers guidance from preseason to postseason with dry-land and on-snow drills for foundational, intermediate, and advanced performance solutions. Whether you are looking to polish your skills, conquer the new terrain, or compete on circuit, Total Skiing is your total guide to exhilarating all-mountain skiing!
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41

Pahnke, Anthony. Brazil's Long Revolution: Radical Achievements of the Landless Workers Movement. University of Arizona Press, 2018.

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42

Brazil's Long Revolution: Radical Achievements of the Landless Workers Movement. University of Arizona Press, 2018.

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43

Challenging social inequality: The landless rural worker's movement and agrarian reform in Brazil. Duke University Press, 2012.

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44

Paxton, Robert O. Comparisons and Definitions. Edited by R. J. B. Bosworth. Oxford University Press, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780199594788.013.0030.

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Why did fascism succeed in some parts of Europe and not in others? This question places the topic squarely in the domain of comparative history. The development of fascism in Europe after 1919 presents a fruitful terrain for comparison. Every European nation, indeed all economically developed nations with some degree of political democracy, had some kind of fascist movement. At further stages of development, the outcomes were dramatically different. In Italy and Germany, fascist movements became major players and achieved power. In the most solidly established Western European democracies, such as Britain and Scandinavia, fascist movements remained marginal. In some cases, such as France and Belgium, they became conspicuous but could approach power only after foreign conquest. A number of authoritarian regimes, including Franco's Spain, Salazar's Portugal, Antonescu's Romania, Horthy's Hungary, imperial Japan, and Vargas's Brazil, borrowed some trappings from fascism but excluded fascist parties from real power.
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45

Cutting the Wire: The Story of the Landless Movement in Brazil. Published by Latin America Bureau. Distribute, 2002.

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46

Stavrakakis, Yannis. Populism and Hegemony. Edited by Cristóbal Rovira Kaltwasser, Paul Taggart, Paulina Ochoa Espejo, and Pierre Ostiguy. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198803560.013.26.

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How can theories of hegemony advance our understanding of populism? Against the background of Gramsci’s work, this chapter draws on Laclau, Mouffe, and other theoretical resources in order to illuminate what shapes and animates populist discourse, what overdetermines its hegemonic potential. We focus on populist articulatory practices as political interventions operating within a broader socio-symbolic as well as psycho-social terrain that both facilitates their formation and—at the same time—limits their scope. The chapter highlights thus the need to take into account the broader terrain of populism/anti-populism antagonisms in order to effectively identify and inquire into the political performance and hegemonic effects of populist movements. Finally, a series of empirical examples are used to illustrate the argument.
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47

Occupying Schools, Occupying Land: How the Landless Workers Movement Transformed Brazilian Education. Oxford University Press, 2019.

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48

Marine Corps Schools (U S ). Terrain. Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2021.

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49

Terrain. BookBaby, 2022.

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50

Terrain. Cinnamon Press, 2012.

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