Academic literature on the topic 'Oriental Tales'

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Journal articles on the topic "Oriental Tales"

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Mahdi, Dr Basma Harbi, and Assist Lecturer Suaad Abd Ali Kareem. "Representations of the Oriental Woman in Lord Byron’s “Turkish Tales”." ALUSTATH JOURNAL FOR HUMAN AND SOCIAL SCIENCES 223, no. 1 (December 1, 2017): 37–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.36473/ujhss.v223i1.312.

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This study deals with the representations of the oriental woman in the Western narrative on orient. The Western representations of oriental woman are products of specific moments and developments in culture. For their own rhetorical and political purposes, the Western writers employ a discourse representing an Eastern woman, whose Otherness is always subject to qualification and change. The concern of this study is to reveal how this narrative is revolved around certain concept that the oriental woman is victimized. Byron’s conception of the oriental woman is shaped by these Orientalist ideas. In “Turkish Tales,” Byron uses the figure of the Oriental woman and the harem system. What we find in these tales is oriental women who are both domestic and disobedient, and who try to resist their bounded existence; the harem. Byron often portrays the harem as a confined domestic space against which women may reasonably rebel. But their acts of rebellion almost always end in failure.
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Giuliano, Cheryl Fallon. "Gulnare/Kaled's "Untold" Feminization of Byron's Oriental Tales." Studies in English Literature, 1500-1900 33, no. 4 (1993): 785. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/450749.

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김현생. "Byron and Islam: A Study of ‘Oriental Tales’." Studies in English Language & Literature 37, no. 1 (February 2011): 63–87. http://dx.doi.org/10.21559/aellk.2011.37.1.004.

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Nigmadjonovna, Nazokat Yusufjonova. "Literary conception and aesthetic interpretation in oriental epic folk tales." ACADEMICIA: An International Multidisciplinary Research Journal 10, no. 10 (2020): 335. http://dx.doi.org/10.5958/2249-7137.2020.01087.3.

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Muehlhaeusler, Mark. "Oriental tales in 18th-century manuscripts … and in English translation." Middle Eastern Literatures 16, no. 2 (August 2013): 189–202. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1475262x.2013.843261.

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Cannon, Garland. "A Compendium of Eastern Elements in Byron's Oriental Tales (review)." Dictionaries: Journal of the Dictionary Society of North America 22, no. 1 (2001): 223–25. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/dic.2001.0019.

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Cohen, Ashley L. "Wage Slavery, Oriental Despotism, and Global Labor Management in Maria Edgeworth’s Popular Tales." Eighteenth Century 55, no. 2-3 (2014): 193–215. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/ecy.2014.0020.

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Stoneman, Richard. "Oriental Motifs in the Alexander Romance." Antichthon 26 (November 1992): 95–113. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s006647740000071x.

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Over the centuries, the fabulous adventures of Alexander the Great have become as prominent in art and literature as his historical achievements. Medieval artists in particular are frequent sources of depictions of the hero in such adventures as the search for the water of life, the flight into the air in a basket borne by eagles, the descent into the sea in a diving bell, the interview with the talking trees of India and the visit to the dwellings of the gods. Familiar as these episodes are—or were—it is easy for us to forget how completely new a thing they represent in the tradition of Greek prose writing. With the decipherments of cuneiform some one hundred years ago, a number of scholars concluded that they could not have been developed entirely within the Greek tradition, and posited direct influence from one or more Babylonian or other near eastern sources or traditions to explain the occurrence in Greek literature of these curious tales. Despite the antiquity of these arguments, they have been accepted without examination by many more recent writers on the Alexander Romance.
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Ayşen Kaim, Agnieszka. "Tureccy i bałkańscy „singers of tales” – „jarzmo” inspiracji czy epicka dwubiegunowość?" Slavia Meridionalis 11 (August 31, 2015): 63–80. http://dx.doi.org/10.11649/sm.2011.004.

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Turkish and Balkan “singers of tales” – a yoke of inspiration or epic independence?The research material is mostly based on the works of Albert Lord and Milman Parry, Karl Reichl, Ilhan Basgoz, Pertev Boratav. Epic singers played a significant part in spreading national spirit, be it Turkish or Slavic. The Balkan artists called guslar used a one-string instrument called gusle while a Turkish minstrel ozan and ashik usually used a two-stringed instrument called kopuz or saz. The typical stage for their activities were coffeehouses. Oral epics were transmitted by word of mouth from one singer to another, sometimes by way of formal training based on the transmission of repertoire and technique from master to apprentice. Representative of both traditions was the use of metrics and formulaic style. The song was orally composed in performance, with the audience’s participation. The musical aspect facilitated memorisation. The text to be learned by heart was a story in a song. Although the Turkish and Balkan epic traditions developed independently of each other, the effect of Turkish conquest on the Balkan epic tradition is evident, especially in the style of those singers who perform in borderland (in Kosovo and northern Albania). The Turkish occupation itself became the subject of many epics, reinforcing the national identity of the local population. However, oriental influences also emerged in some formal characteristics, such as the length of the songs, the ornamentation and stylised oriental images and the transformation of separate ballads and short narratives into epic cycles. In both cases for performers themselves this artistic activity became “a way of life”.
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Johnston, Andrew James. "Chaucer‘s Postcolonial Renaissance." Bulletin of the John Rylands Library 91, no. 2 (September 2015): 5–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.7227/bjrl.91.2.1.

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This article investigates how Chaucer‘s Knight‘s and Squire‘s tales critically engage with the Orientalist strategies buttressing contemporary Italian humanist discussions of visual art. Framed by references to crusading, the two tales enter into a dialogue focusing, in particular, on the relations between the classical, the scientific and the Oriental in trecento Italian discourses on painting and optics, discourses that are alluded to in the description of Theseus Theatre and the events that happen there. The Squire‘s Tale exhibits what one might call a strategic Orientalism designed to draw attention to the Orientalism implicit in his fathers narrative, a narrative that, for all its painstaking classicism, displays both remarkably Italianate and Orientalist features. Read in tandem, the two tales present a shrewd commentary on the exclusionary strategies inherent in the construction of new cultural identities, arguably making Chaucer the first postcolonial critic of the Renaissance.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Oriental Tales"

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Liassis, Nora. "Lord Byron's attitudes to the Near East in the Oriental tales." Thesis, University of Reading, 1997. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.433461.

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Baktir, Hasan. "Representation Of The Ottoman Orient In Eighteenth Century English Literature." Phd thesis, METU, 2007. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/3/12608967/index.pdf.

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This thesis studies the representation of the Ottoman Orient in Eighteenth Century English Literature. The thesis argues that a comprehensive understanding of the representation of the Ottoman Orient in 18th century English literature requires a new perspective
thus investigates different aspects of the interaction between the Ottoman Orient and 18th century Europe. Said'
s Orientalism discusses how European writers created a separate discourse to represent the Orient. The present thesis does not completely reject Said'
s arguement
rather it argues that there was also a negotiating tendency which did not make radical distinction between the East and the West. Relying on 18th century pseudo-oriental letters, oriental tales and oriental travelogues the study tries to indicate that representation of the Ottoman Orient in 18th century English literature was different from the earlier centuries because developig critical and liberal spirit established a negotiation between the two worlds. The negotiation of the two worlds has been studied as a significant theme of the pseudo-oriental letters, oriental tales and oriental travelogues. The present study tried to indicate how the critical and inquisitive spirit of the age of Enlightenment interanimated Oreiental and European cultures.
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Bagabas, Omar Abdullah. "Byron's representation of the Orient in 'Childe Harold's Pilgrimage', 'Don Juan', and 'The Oriental Tales'." Thesis, University of Essex, 1993. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.334543.

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Nash, Paul Stephen. "The idea of China in British literature, 1757 to 1785." Thesis, University of Edinburgh, 2013. http://hdl.handle.net/1842/17905.

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This thesis examines the idea of China in British literature during a clearly defined period. Between 1757 and 1785, when Britain still had little direct contact and cultural exchange with the Chinese, China evoked various attitudes, images and beliefs in the British imagination. At times uncertain and evasive, popular understandings of China were sufficiently malleable for writers of the period to knead into domestic political satire and social discourse, giving fresh expression to popular criticisms, philosophical aspirations, and religious tensions. The period presents several prominent English, Irish, and Scottish writers who use the idea of China precisely in this manner in writings as generically diverse as drama, translation, travel writing, pseudo-Oriental letters, novels, and fairy tales. Some invoke China’s supposed defects to accentuate Britain’s material, scientific, and moral progress, or to feed contemporary debate about decadence in British society and government. Others exploit the notion of a more civilized and virtuous China to satirize what they regard as a supercilious cultural milieu attendant on their own emerging polite and commercial society, or to interrogate their nation’s moral criteria of the highest good, public-spiritedness, or evolving global enterprise. All give the idea of China new currency in the dialectical interplay between literary appeals to antiquity and the pursuit of modernity, enlisting it in philosophical and theological debates of Enlightenment. This thesis will argue that its subject writers, including Arthur Murphy, Thomas Percy, Oliver Goldsmith, John Bell, and Horace Walpole, use the idea of China to help define a British identity as culturally and politically distinct from Europe, especially France, and to contemplate Britain’s place within global history and a broadening world view at mid-century.
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Lithell, Ulla-Britt. "Kvinnoarbete och barntillsyn i 1700- och 1800-talets Österbotten /." Stockholm : Almqvist och Wiksell, 1988. http://catalogue.bnf.fr/ark:/12148/cb35512868f.

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Chozick, Matthew. "How English translations of the Tale of Genji helped to popularize the work in Japan." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2017. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/7282/.

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'The Tale of Genji' had been out of print in Japan for nearly two centuries when its first English translation debuted in 1882. Ironically, as fin de siècle Anglophones encountered early reviews of 'Genji' in 'The New York Times' and elsewhere as a Japanese classic, the text was unavailable in Tokyo bookstores. This study investigates the millennium-long history of 'Genji', shedding light particularly upon how its English translators introduced textual and marketing strategies that were adopted by Japanese to domestically popularize the work. Such findings will extend those of G.G. Rowley (1997), who first contended that 'Genji' had fallen out of print between the years of 1706 and 1890. This study builds upon Rowley's research, clarifying how English translations of 'Genji' were responsible for the work's return to print in Japan, where 'Genji' has subsequently become the country's national classic. Methodologically, in exploring how translators have creatively enriched Murasaki's legacy up until the present, this study applies Anthony Pym's notion of humanization (2009) and Pascale Casanova's call for literary historicization (2007). Additionally, this thesis contributes to translation research by introducing the Japanese concept of reverse-importation. The term describes a process through which objects can gain recognition in their domestic market due to perceptions of popularity achieved abroad. Murasaki's tale provides a case to better understand how English translations of 'Genji' have, through reverse-importation, altered the work's standing in Japan.
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Witherbee, Amy. "New Conceptions of Time and the Making of a Political-Economic Public in Eighteenth-Century Britain." Thesis, Boston College, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/675.

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Thesis advisor: Elizabeth Kowaleski Wallace
Thesis advisor: Alan Richardson
This project argues that the British financial revolution ushered in a new way of conceptualizing time based in mathematic innovations of the seventeenth-century. As it was employed in financial instruments and government policies, mathematics' spatialized representation of time conflicted with older, more intuitive experience of time associated with consciousness and duration. Borrowing from the work of Henri Bergson and Gilles Deleuze and Félix Guattari, I examine how he interaction between these two temporalities reshaped conceptions of value, the public, and the body in the first half of the eighteenth century. The first two chapters of my study explore texts ranging from pamphlets that advocated for the establishment of banks to the periodical essays of The Spectator and The Tatler that advocated for political economic conceptions of time and value at the turn of the century. These texts reveal the subtle tensions and strange paradoxes created by the clash of disparate temporalities and open the door to new readings of fictional narratives like those of Daniel Defoe and Aphra Behn. My second two chapters focus on selected works by these two authors to explore how longer first-person narrative forms modeled both the possibilities and dangers of emerging political economic structures. My study concludes with two chapters that follow the development of the oriental tale in Britain. Making use of a seventeenth-century tradition that explores the tensions between representation and meaning in oriental fables, Arabian Nights' Entertainments follows on the heels of John Paul Marana's Letters Writ by a Turkish Spy and reshapes the genre to reflect the new concerns of a global marketplace in which deferral has become essential to the production of value. I conclude these chapters with readings of Johnson's Rasselas, Hawkesworth's Almoran and Hamet, and Frances Sheridan's Nourjahad, three tales that foreshadow late-eighteenth-century efforts to manage the public and its temporal paradoxes through an attention to the body
Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2009
Submitted to: Boston College. Graduate School of Arts and Sciences
Discipline: English
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Rendon-Garza, Jose Rene. "Global Corporate Tax Competition for Export Oriented Foreign Direct Investment." Digital Archive @ GSU, 2006. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/econ_diss/14.

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Economic integration and mobility of capital have set the ground for a significant competition over resources. Tax competition for internationally mobile tax bases such as foreign direct investments has become an important matter of study. Nevertheless, literature has focused on a regional or geographical neighboring condition competition through taxes. This dissertation aims to test whether tax competition for foreign direct investment has changed its regional characteristic towards a global or world-wide competition. Global or world-wide tax competition can be thought of as uncooperative tax policy reactions between governments of different countries of the world not necessarily near each other geographically, but in similar economic conditions and with the purpose to influence the allocation of mobile tax bases world-wide. For the purpose of this study, export oriented foreign capital investment was referred to as the internationally mobile tax base. A theoretical model was constructed allowing for three countries, geographical distance, transportation costs, labor and technology skills, as well as four types of individuals: workers, capitalists, and two types of entrepreneurs. Optimal corporate statutory and average effective tax rates were obtained in order to serve as reaction functions between governments and evaluate the presence of tax competition. A spatial econometric model was used to estimate the empirical approximation of the theoretical model. Four types of weight matrixes were computed: homogeneous weights, similar economic conditions, similar transportation costs from the FDI host country to the FDI home country, and neighboring conditions of FDI host countries. The sample covered 53 countries from different areas of the world from 1984 to 2002. Regarding the data, several variables were constructed, among those: the corporate average effective tax rate. The statutory corporate tax rate was discarded since it misses important factors for capital investment such as tax holidays and depreciation schedules. The principal result suggests that countries from the sample appear to behave in a tax competitive way not only in geographical neighboring terms but also in a global or world-wide approach. In fact, countries appear to compete in a stronger way in global or world-wide terms than when assuming a regional or neighboring condition.
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Mason, Mary Katherine. "Imitation is the Sincerest Form of Comedy: Finding the Humor in Rasselas through Ecclesiastes." Digital Archive @ GSU, 2011. http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/english_theses/113.

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For years, scholars have focused on the serious narrative of Samuel Johnson’s Rasselas and have been unable to reconcile the episodes of ironic humor within the larger serious narrative. By reading Rasselas as an imitation of Ecclesiastes rather than an Oriental tale, critics can begin to identify the humor in Rasselas through the embellishment of the story of Ecclesiastes. The failures of the character Koheleth in Ecclesiastes become the genesis for the failures of Rasselas and his companions; however, the failures of Rasselas and more elaborate and comedic. How Johnson embellishes these failures to create humorous irony in Rasselas becomes clearer for the reader through this new categorization of genre, which can hopefully unite the two opposing views of criticism surrounding this book.
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Lei, Peng. "A Linear Programming Method for Synthesizing Origin-Destination (O-D) Trip Tables from Traffic Counts for Inconsistent Systems." Thesis, Virginia Tech, 1998. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/36860.

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Origin-Destination (O-D) trip tables represent the demand-supply information of each directed zonal-pair in a given region during a given period of time. The effort of this research is to develop a linear programming methodology for estimating O-D trip tables based on observed link volumes. In order to emphasize the nature of uncertainty in the data and in the problem, the developed model permits the user's knowledge of path travel time to vary within a band-width of values, and accordingly modifies the user-optimality principle. The data on the observed flows might also not be complete and need not be perfectly matched. In addition, a prior trip table could also be specified in order to guide the updating process via the model solution. To avoid excessive computational demands required by a total numeration of all possible paths between each O-D pair, a Column Generation Algorithm (CGA) is adopted to exploit the special structures of the model. Based on the known capacity of each link, a simple formula is suggested to calculate the cost for the links having unknown volumes. An indexed cost is introduced to avoid the consideration of unnecessary passing-through-zone paths, and an algorithm for solving the corresponding minimum-cost-path problem is developed. General principles on the design of an object-oriented code are presented, and some useful programming techniques are suggested for this special problem. Some test results on the related models are presented and compared, and different sensitivity analyses are performed based on different scenarios. Finally, several research topics are recommended for future research.
Master of Science
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Books on the topic "Oriental Tales"

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Marguerite, Yourcenar. Oriental tales. Henley-on-Thames: Ellis, 1985.

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Marguerite, Yourcenar. Oriental tales. Lewes,Sussex: Masterworks/Isis, 1989.

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Marguerite, Yourcenar. Oriental tales. London: Black Swan, 1986.

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Marguerite, Yourcenar. Oriental tales. New York: Farrar Straus Giroux, 1985.

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Oriental tales: Selected Bangla fiction. Dhaka: Agamee Prakashoni, 2015.

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Mitos, leyendas y tradiciones de la Banda Oriental. Montevideo: BetumSan Ediciones, 2001.

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A compendium of eastern elements in Byron's Oriental tales. New York: Peter Lang, 1999.

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Tall tales and misadventures of a young westernized oriental gentleman. Singapore: Ridge Books, 2014.

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Peseschkian, Nossrat. Oriental stories as tools in psycho therapy: The merchant & the parrot. New Delhi: Sterling Publishers, 1985.

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Peseschkian, Nossrat. Oriental stories as tools in psychotherapy: The merchant and the parrot. Berlin: Springer-Verlag, 1985.

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Book chapters on the topic "Oriental Tales"

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Jung, Sung-won, Mi-young Kang, and Hyuk-chul Kwon. "Hybrid Approach to Extracting Information from Web-Tables." In Computer Processing of Oriental Languages. Beyond the Orient: The Research Challenges Ahead, 109–19. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/11940098_11.

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Shu, Hua. "View maintenance using conditional tables." In Deductive and Object-Oriented Databases, 67–84. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-63792-3_9.

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Kirsten, Wolfgang, Michael Ihringer, Peter Schulte, and Bernhard Röhrig. "SQL Access and Tables." In Object-Oriented Application Development Using the Caché Postrelational Database, 221–48. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2001. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-98104-3_8.

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Kirsten, Wolfgang, Michael Ihringer, Mathias Kühn, and Bernhard Röhrig. "Sql Access and Tables." In Object-Oriented Application Development Using the Caché Postrelational Database, 221–48. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2003. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-55516-9_8.

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Hemmelskamp, Jens. "Environmental Taxes and Standards: An Empirical Analysis of the Impact on Innovation." In Innovation-Oriented Environmental Regulation, 303–29. Heidelberg: Physica-Verlag HD, 2000. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-662-12069-9_15.

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Ślezak, Dominik. "Decision value oriented decomposition of data tables." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 487–96. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-63614-5_47.

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Hook, Pam. "Teaching and Learning: Tales from the Ampersand." In Transformative Approaches to New Technologies and Student Diversity in Futures Oriented Classrooms, 115–37. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2642-0_8.

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Bigum, Chris. "Schools and Computers: Tales of a Digital Romance." In Transformative Approaches to New Technologies and Student Diversity in Futures Oriented Classrooms, 15–28. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-007-2642-0_2.

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Lampe, Ulrich, Markus Kieselmann, André Miede, Sebastian Zöller, and Ralf Steinmetz. "A Tale of Millis and Nanos: Time Measurements in Virtual and Physical Machines." In Service-Oriented and Cloud Computing, 172–79. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-642-40651-5_14.

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Vitek, Jan, and R. Nigel Horspool. "Compact dispatch tables for dynamically typed object oriented languages." In Lecture Notes in Computer Science, 309–25. Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer Berlin Heidelberg, 1996. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/3-540-61053-7_70.

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Conference papers on the topic "Oriental Tales"

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Handschuh, Helena. "Hardware intrinsic security based on SRAM PUFs: Tales from the industry." In 2011 IEEE International Symposium on Hardware-Oriented Security and Trust (HOST). IEEE, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hst.2011.5955009.

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Glærum, Sigurd. "TALUS---an object oriented air combat simulation." In the 31st conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1999. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/324898.325025.

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Enge-Rosenblatt, Olaf. "Session details: Invited talks and demonstration." In EOOLT '19: 9th International Workshop on Equation-Based Object-Oriented Modeling Languages and Tools. New York, NY, USA: ACM, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/3382490.

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Babar, Muhammad Ali. "Tales of empirically understanding and providing process support for migrating to clouds." In 2013 IEEE 7th International Symposium on the Maintenance and Evolution of Service-Oriented and Cloud-Based Systems (MESOCA). IEEE, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/mesoca.2013.6632737.

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Lee, Adrienne, Nancy Pennington, and Scott Wolff. "Comparing procedural and object-oriented design." In Posters and short talks of the 1992 SIGCHI conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1125021.1125046.

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Rufino, Jose, Albano Alves, Jose Exposto, and Antonio Pina. "pDomus: a prototype for Cluster-oriented Distributed Hash Tables." In 15th EUROMICRO International Conference on Parallel, Distributed and Network-Based Processing (PDP'07). IEEE, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/pdp.2007.62.

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Cronin, Patrick, and Chengmo Yang. "A Fetching Tale: Covert Communication with the Hardware Prefetcher." In 2019 IEEE International Symposium on Hardware Oriented Security and Trust (HOST). IEEE, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/hst.2019.8741033.

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Détienne, Françoise. "Design strategies in object-oriented programming and expertise." In Posters and short talks of the 1992 SIGCHI conference. New York, New York, USA: ACM Press, 1992. http://dx.doi.org/10.1145/1125021.1125045.

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Mayo, P. I., R. M. Erkkila, A. Bradbury, and R. W. Chantrell. "Interaction effects in longitudinally and randomly oriented barium hexaferrite tapes." In International Conference on Magnetics. IEEE, 1990. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/intmag.1990.734461.

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Renzella, Jake, and Andrew Cain. "Supporting better formative feedback in task-oriented portfolio assessment." In 2017 IEEE 6th International Conference on Teaching, Assessment and Learning for Engineering (TALE). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1109/tale.2017.8252362.

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Reports on the topic "Oriental Tales"

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Chandra, Shailesh, Mehran Rahmani, Timothy Thai, Vivek Mishra, and Jacqueline Camacho. Evaluating Financing Mechanisms and Economic Benefits to Fund Grade Separation Projects. Mineta Transportation Institute, January 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.31979/mti.2020.1926.

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Abstract:
Investment in transportation infrastructure projects generates benefits, both direct and indirect. While emissions reductions, crash reductions, and travel time savings are prominent direct benefits, there are indirect benefits in the form of real estate enhancements that could pay off debt or loan incurred in the improvement of the infrastructure itself. Studies have shown that improvements associated with rail transportation (such as station upgrades) trigger an increase in the surrounding real estate values, increasing both the opportunity for monetary gains and, ultimately, property tax collections. There is plenty of available guidance that provides blueprints for benefits calculations for operational improvements in rail transportation. However, resources are quite limited in the analysis of benefits that accrue from the separation of railroad at-grade crossings. Understanding the impact of separation in a neighborhood with high employment or population could generate revenues through increased tax collections. In California, the research need is further amplified by a lack of guidance from the California Public Utilities Commission (CPUC) on at-grade crossing for separation based on revenue generated. There is a critical need to understand whether grade separation projects could impact neighboring real estate values that could potentially be used to fund such separations. With COVID-19, as current infrastructure spending in California is experiencing a reboot, an approach more oriented to benefits and costs for railroad at-grade separation should be explored. Thus, this research uses a robust benefits-to-cost analysis (BCA) to probe the economic impacts of railroad at-grade separation projects. The investigation is carried out across twelve railroad-highway at-grade crossings in California. These crossings are located at Francisquito Ave., Willowbrook/Rosa Parks Station, Sassafras St., Palm St., Civic Center Dr., L St., Spring St. (North), J St., E St., H St., Parkmoor West, and Nursery Ave. The authors found that a majority of the selected at-grade crossings analyzed accrue high benefits-to-cost (BC) ratios from travel time savings, safety improvements, emissions reductions, and potential revenue generated if property taxes are collected and used to fund such separation projects. The analysis shows that with the estimated BC ratios, the railroad crossing at Nursery Ave. in Fremont, Palm St. in San Diego, and H St. in Chula Vista could be ideal candidates for separation. The methodology presented in this research could serve as a handy reference for decision-makers selecting one or more at-grade crossings for the separation considering economic outputs and costs.
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