To see the other types of publications on this topic, follow the link: Peter Grimes (Britten, Benjamin).

Journal articles on the topic 'Peter Grimes (Britten, Benjamin)'

Create a spot-on reference in APA, MLA, Chicago, Harvard, and other styles

Select a source type:

Consult the top 17 journal articles for your research on the topic 'Peter Grimes (Britten, Benjamin).'

Next to every source in the list of references, there is an 'Add to bibliography' button. Press on it, and we will generate automatically the bibliographic reference to the chosen work in the citation style you need: APA, MLA, Harvard, Chicago, Vancouver, etc.

You can also download the full text of the academic publication as pdf and read online its abstract whenever available in the metadata.

Browse journal articles on a wide variety of disciplines and organise your bibliography correctly.

1

McKee, David. "Peter Grimes. Benjamin Britten." Opera Quarterly 11, no. 3 (1995): 193–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oq/11.3.193.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
2

Law, J. K. "Peter Grimes. Benjamin Britten." Opera Quarterly 13, no. 1 (January 1, 1996): 97–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oq/13.1.97.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
3

Rodríguez, Pablo L. "La grabación como texto, el productor como editor y el compositor como intérprete: John Culshaw y Benjamin Britten (1963-1970)." Brocar. Cuadernos de Investigación Histórica, no. 37 (December 20, 2013): 105–20. http://dx.doi.org/10.18172/brocar.2540.

Full text
Abstract:
Al escuchar una grabación de música clásica no solemos reparar en la labor del productor y nos limitamos a considerar tan sólo al compositor y al intérprete. Sin embargo, la importancia e influencia de los productores ha sido determinante durante toda la historia de la grabación musical; su labor evolucionó a lo largo del segundo tercio del siglo XX desde la concepción de la grabación como fotografía de una interpretación en los años treinta hasta su consideración como objeto artístico en los sesenta, pasando por la visión idealista del concierto en los cuarenta y cincuenta. Uno de los productores más importantes y novedosos de los años cincuenta y sesenta fue John Culshaw (1924-1980) que consideró la grabación como otro texto, además de la partitura, a la hora de documentar la obra musical; un texto mucho más rico que los signos de notación al documentar una obra musical en su manifestación sonora. Culshaw diseñó todo un sistema de producción musical que puso en práctica en su mítica grabación del Anillo de Wagner entre 1958 y 1965 donde separó la grabación del planteamiento idealista del concierto en vivo o pretendió paliar la pérdida de lo visual a través de medios técnicos y acústicos conocidos como “Sonicstage”. En este artículo me centraré en su colaboración con el compositor Benjamin Britten (1913- 1976), de la que nacieron registros fonográficos clásicos para Decca ("War Requiem" en 1963) y audiovisuales para la BBC ("Peter Grimes" en 1969), en los que el compositor inglés dirigía sus obras y que le llevarían a escribir una ópera especialmente pensaba para su emisión televisiva ("Owen Wingrave" en 1970).
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
4

Camati, Anna Stegh. "A Midsummer Night’s Dream: Reflections on Benjamin Britten’s Chamber Opera." Letras de Hoje 55, no. 1 (April 28, 2020): 33796. http://dx.doi.org/10.15448/1984-7726.2020.1.33796.

Full text
Abstract:
Opera performances, located at the intersection of literature, theater music and the visual arts, tend to fuse specificities of several art forms. This essay reflects on the libretto and score of the chamber opera A Midsummer Night’s Dream (1960), by Benjamin Britten (1913-1976), based on Shakespeare’s homonymous text (1595-1596), and analyses the 1981 operatic adaptation at Glyndebourne, directed by the renowned theatre director and régisseur Peter Hall (1930-2017). The intermedial dialogues among Shakespeare, Britten and Hall will be investigated in the light of theoretical perspectives by Linda and Michael Hutcheon, Claus Clüver, Jorge Coli, Freda Chapple and others.***Sonho de uma noite de verão: reflexões sobre a ópera de câmara de Benjamin Britten***Situada na interface da literatura, teatro, música e artes visuais, a performance operística é caracterizada pela fusão de especificidades de diversas formas de arte. Este ensaio reflete sobre o libreto e a partitura de Sonho de uma noite de verão (1960), ópera de câmara de Benjamin Britten (1913-1976), composta a partir do texto homônimo (1595-1596) de Shakespeare, e analisa a adaptação operística de 1981 apresentada em Glyndebourne, dirigida pelo renomado diretor de teatro e régisseur Peter Hall (1930-2017). Os diálogos intermidiáticos entre Shakespeare, Britten e Hall serão investigados à luz de considerações teóricas de Linda e Michael Hutcheon, Claus Clüver, Jorge Coli, Freda Chapple e outros.Palavras-chave: Shakespeare; Benjamin Britten; Peter Hall; Adaptação;Intermidialidade
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
5

Ward-Griffin, Danielle. "Theme Park Britten: Staging the English Village at the Aldeburgh Festival." Cambridge Opera Journal 27, no. 1 (March 2015): 63–95. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954586714000159.

Full text
Abstract:
AbstractJournalists and scholars have long observed how Aldeburgh seems to function as a larger stage for Benjamin Britten’s village-themed operas. Not only is it the explicit setting forPeter Grimes, but it also serves as the site for the annual Aldeburgh Festival of Music and the Arts, founded by Britten in 1948. This article examines how the Festival served as a parallel construction of the village life seen in Britten’s early operas, particularlyAlbert Herring(1947) andLittle Sweep(1949). Analysing materials from the initial years of the Festival – including programme books and accounts of exhibitions and performances – I trace how Festival organisers drew upon the rhetoric and modes of behaviour of contemporary tourism in promoting a particular vision of the local community. By blurring the line between the fictional worlds of Britten’s village-themed operas and the site of Aldeburgh, the Festival encouraged the visitors to fabricate the very kind of community that organisers claimed could already be found at Aldeburgh.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
6

Mark, Christopher. "Britten and the Circle of Fifths." Journal of the Royal Musical Association 119, no. 2 (1994): 268–97. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jrma/119.2.268.

Full text
Abstract:
Britten‘s music is usually thought of as tonal, even if the term is sometimes qualified.’ Much of the drama of his operas (at least, up to and including A Midsummer Night's Dream, op. 64 (1960)) has been discussed in terms of ‘tonal action’, as have the structures of individual songs, song cycles and purely instrumental works. Yet his earliest published works are not tonal in the same way as later, more widely known ones. Not until the works of his American years (1939–42) do we begin to see the kind of tonal structure that enabled Peter Grimes, op. 33 (1945), to be conceived – structures like the highly focused tritonal opposition of Les illuminations, op. 18 (1939), or the E/C ambiguity (eventually resolved in favour of E) of the Hymn to St Cecilia, op. 27 (1942). Nevertheless Britten's first three works with opus numbers, written while he was a student at the Royal College of Music from 1930 to 1933 (the Sinfonietta, op. 1, completed in July 1932; the Phantasy Quartet, op. 2, completed in October 1932; and A Boy was Born, op. 3, completed in May 1933), are quite clearly diatonic in basis. This essay explores the ways in which this diatonicism is structured, and sketches the subsequent history of the main procedure involved.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
7

Ляхова, Ольга Олеговна, and Аминат Алиевна Кубанова. "Features of the drama and the concept of the Four Seas Interludes from the opera "Peter Grimes" by B. Britten." Вестник Адыгейского государственного университета, серия «Филология и искусствоведение», no. 2(277) (October 6, 2021): 195–201. http://dx.doi.org/10.53598/2410-3489-2021-2-277-195-201.

Full text
Abstract:
Рассматриваются оркестровые интерлюдии из оперы «Питер Граймс» Б. Бриттена. Цель - на основе анализа интерлюдий выявить композиционные и драматургические принципы цикла. Методология работы определяется традициями музыкознания в области исследования, главным из которых является метод музыкального анализа. В результате сделан вывод о том, что Четыре морские интерлюдии можно рассматривать как единый цикл, близкий по форме программной симфонии, отражающей внутренний психологический конфликт главного героя оперы. Практическая ценность работы заключается в возможности использования результатов исследования в курсах учебных дисциплин: зарубежная история музыки, драматургия музыкального произведения, анализ музыкальных форм. This work examines the orchestral interludes from the opera "Peter Grimes" by B. Britten. The purpose of this article is to identify the compositional and dramatic principles of the cycle based on the analysis of interludes. The methodology of the work is determined by the traditions of musicology in the field of research, the main of which is the method of musical analysis. As a result, it is concluded that the Four Seas Interludes can be considered as a single cycle, similar in form to the program symphony, reflecting the internal psychological conflict of the main character of the opera. The practical value of the work lies in the possibility of using the results of the research in the courses of academic disciplines: foreign history of music, drama of a musical composition, analysis of musical forms.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
8

Docherty, Barbara. "Sentence into Cadence: The word-setting of Tippett and Britten." Tempo, no. 166 (September 1988): 2–11. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0040298200024256.

Full text
Abstract:
When Addressing a text to be set a composer will, at the extremes, offer it violence or reverence, and a sharp-edged exchange was committed to print in the 1960's concerning the correct relation between parole and musica when sentence (or stanza) is made cadence. In his Conclusion to Denis Stevens's A History of Song, Michael Tippett stated that one of the attributes of the song-writer was the ability to destroy all the verbal music of the poetry he set and to substitute ‘the music of music’. Five years later, in his contribution to the Festschrift for Tippett's 60th birthday, Peter Pears made a spirited denial of this ‘Mantis-like’ proposition: the composer should court his text, designing a musical structure compliant to his purpose while according the words the care of the poet whose art they first were. Behind this genteel shadow-boxing lay a wider issue: whether there were definable canons for the setting of English text (as exemplified by Benjamin Britten, since it was against his vocal works that the felicities and inflations Pears discerned in Tippett's 1943 cantata Boyhood's End and 1951 song cycle The Heart's Assurance were implicitly being measured) and whether Tippett's practice flouted them.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
9

Pyke, Cameron. "My Beloved Man. The Letters of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears ed. by Vicki P. Stroeher, Nicholas Clark, Jude Brimmer." Fontes Artis Musicae 64, no. 1 (2017): 72–73. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/fam.2017.0003.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
10

Vickers, Justin. "My Beloved Man: The Letters of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears ed. by Vicki P. Stroeher, Nicholas Clark, Jude Brimmer." Notes 73, no. 4 (2017): 726–30. http://dx.doi.org/10.1353/not.2017.0050.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
11

Franseen, Kristin M. "Queering Musical Biography in the Writings of Edward Prime-Stevenson and Rosa Newmarch." 19th-Century Music 44, no. 2 (2020): 100–118. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/ncm.2020.44.2.100.

Full text
Abstract:
Beginning with the “open secret” of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears's relationship and continuing through debates over Handel's and Schubert's sexuality and analyses of Ethel Smyth's memoirs, biography has played a central role in the development of queer musicology. At the same time, life-writing's focus on extramusical details and engagement with difficult-to-substantiate anecdotes and rumors often seem suspect to scholars. In the case of early-twentieth-century music research, however, these very gaps and ambiguities paradoxically offered some authors and readers at the time rare spaces for approaching questions of sexuality in music. Issues of subjectivity in instrumental music aligned well with rumors about autobiographical confession within Tchaikovsky's Symphony No. 6 (Pathétique) for those who knew how to listen and read between the lines. This article considers the different ways in which the framing of biographical anecdotes and gossip in scholarship by music critic-turned-amateur sexologist Edward Prime-Stevenson and Tchaikovsky scholar Rosa Newmarch allowed for queer readings of symphonic music. It evaluates Prime-Stevenson's discussions of musical biography and interpretation in The Intersexes (1908/9) and Newmarch's Tchaikovsky: His Life and Works (1900), translation of Modest Tchaikovsky's biography, and article on the composer in Grove's Dictionary of Music and Musicians to explore how they addressed potentially taboo topics, engaged with formal and informal sources of biographical knowledge (including one another's work), and found their scholarly voices in the absence of academic frameworks for addressing gender and sexuality. While their overt goals were quite different—Newmarch sought to dismiss “sensationalist” rumors about Tchaikovsky's death for a broad readership, while Prime-Stevenson used queer musical gossip as a primary source in his self-published history of homosexuality—both grappled with questions of what can and cannot be read into a composer's life and works and how to relate to possible queer meanings in symphonic music. The very aspects of biography that place it in a precarious position as scholarship ultimately reveal a great deal about the history of musicology and those who write it.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
12

Walker, Alan. "Hans Keller. Essays on Music. Edited by Christopher Wintle, with Bayan Northcott and Irene Samuel. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994. xx, 269 pp. ISBN 0-521-46216-9 (hardcover) Hans Keller. Three Psychoanalytical Notes on "Peter Grimes." Edited by Christopher Wintle. London: Institute of Advanced Musical Studies in association with The Britten-Pears Library, 1995. 51 pp. ISBN 1-897747-02-0 (softcover) Hans Keller and Christopher Wintle. Beethoven's String Quartets in F minor, op. 95, and C-sharp minor, op. 131: Two Studies. Nottingham: University of Nottingham, 1995. 55 pp. ISBN 0-9518354-2-4 (softcover)." Canadian University Music Review 17, no. 2 (1997): 118. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/1014797ar.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
13

Lambert, Sterling. "‘In my end is my beginning’: Peter Grimes and Death in Venice." Cambridge Opera Journal, July 29, 2022, 1–27. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0954586722000064.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract Benjamin Britten, gravely ill at the time of its composition, was surely aware that Death in Venice would be his last opera, and it is not surprising that the work should make reference to his first opera, Peter Grimes, as if to bookend his entire operatic career, and survey the enormous distance he had travelled, as a hallmark of what might be considered the composer's late style. Even so, the dramatic and musical relationships between the two works are unusually extensive. Both operas concern an outsider at odds with the society around him, in a strange reflection of the composer's particular situation as he wrote each work. Each is set in a place particularly special to the composer, where land borders sea in a metaphor for the boundary between life and death. Finally, the protagonist's interactions with a mysterious silent boy in each case hints at a part of Britten's character that dared not speak its name. These dramatic correspondences are paralleled in important musical connections between the operas, despite their ostensibly very different musical languages. Britten's final opera could therefore be understood to exemplify the famous words borrowed by T.S. Eliot from Mary, Queen of Scots: ‘In my end is my beginning’, an appropriate concept given the degree to which Britten was occupied with Eliot's verse at this time.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
14

MATEO, MARTA. "THE SOUND OF LITERATURE IN MUSICAL TRANSLATION, AS ILLUSTRATED BY BENJAMIN BRITTEN AND PETER GRIMES." TRADUÇÃO EM REVISTA 2019, no. 27 (November 18, 2019). http://dx.doi.org/10.17771/pucrio.tradrev.45899.

Full text
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
15

Mutti, Lynn. "Sylvia Townsend Warner and Peter Pears: Loss and Friendship." Journal of the Sylvia Townsend Warner Society 21, no. 1 (November 10, 2021). http://dx.doi.org/10.14324/111.444.stw.2021.7.

Full text
Abstract:
This article describes the friendship between Sylvia Townsend Warner, Peter Pears and Benjamin Britten in the 1970s. It draws on previously unpublished correspondence held at the Britten-Pears Archive and the Sylvia Townsend Warner and Valentine Ackland Archive. It describes the role that John Craske’s paintings played in establishing the connection between Warner and Pears, details some visits and covers Britten’s illness and death. The article also describes the concert in Warner’s honour planned by Pears and given in Aldeburgh in July 1977.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
16

Saylor, Eric. "Vicki Stroeher, Nicholas Clark and Jude Brimmer (eds), My Beloved Man: The Letters of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears (2016)." Journal of the Society for Musicology in Ireland, July 17, 2017, 67–70. http://dx.doi.org/10.35561/jsmi12164.

Full text
Abstract:
A review of Vicki Stroeher, Nicholas Clark and Jude Brimmer (eds), My Beloved Man: The Letters of Benjamin Britten and Peter Pears, Aldeburgh Studies in Music, 10 (Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2016). ISBN 978-1-783-27108-5.
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
17

"THE AMERICAN SOCIETY OF HEMATOLOGY." Blood 114, no. 22 (November 20, 2009): R23. http://dx.doi.org/10.1182/blood.v114.22.r23.r23.

Full text
Abstract:
Abstract The Society gratefully acknowledges the time and effort of the following individuals who served as reviewers of abstracts for this meeting: ASH ABSTRACTS COORDINATING REVIEWERS Blanche P. Alter Stephen M. Ansell Ralph B. Arlinghaus Scott Armstrong Asad Bashey Philip Bierman Neil Blumberg Chiara Bonini Dominique Bonnet Jacqueline Boultwood Rena Buckstein John C. Byrd Marc Carrier Lucio H. Castilla Selina Chen-Kiang Nicholas Chiorazzi Jorge Cortes-Franco Claire E. Dearden Mary C. Dinauer Harry Paul Erba Carolyn A. Felix Pierre Fenaux Debra L. Friedman Irene M. Ghobrial Jason R. Gotlib Brandon Hayes-Lattin Cheryl A. Hillery Achille Iolascon Jean-Pierre J. Issa Sundar Jagannath Diane F. Jelinek H. Phillip Koeffler John Koreth Robert J. Kreitman Robert B. Levy David Lillicrap Richard Lottenberg John D. McMannis Mark D. Minden Charles G. Mullighan Arnon Nagler Peter J. Newman Robert Z. Orlowski Antonio Palumbo Julie A. Panepinto Warren S. Pear Sibrand Poppema Barbara Pro Ching-Hon Pui A. Koneti Rao Aaron P. Rapoport Pieter H. Reitsma Douglas D. Ross J. Eric Russell Barbara Savoldo Kirk R. Schultz Radek C. Skoda Marilyn L. Slovak Susan Smyth Hugo ten Cate Herve Tilly John M. Timmerman Ivo Touw Amy J. Wagers Russell E. Ware Catherine J. Wu Virginia M. Zaleskas ASH ABSTRACTS REVIEWERS Camille Abboud Omar Abdel-Wahab Jeremy Abramson Suneet Agarwal Sikander Ailawadhi Onder Alpdogan Andrew Aprikyan Mary Armanios Aneel Ashrani Norio Asou Aglaia Athanassiadou Eyal Attar Mohammad Azam Maria Baer Jorg Baesecke Sarah Ball Karen Ballen Frederic Baron Shannon Bates Minoo Battiwalla Marie Bene Charles Bennett James Berenson Steven Bernstein Francesco Bertoni Monica Bessler Wolfgang Bethge Kapil Bhalla Deepa Bhojwani James Bieker Bruce R. Blazar Annemarie Block David Bodine Catherine Bollard Antonio Bonati Eric Bouhassira Benjamin Braun Christopher Bredeson Patrick Brown Ross Brown Jan Burger Dario Campana Jose Cancelas Paul Carpenter Andrew Carroll James Casella Rebecca Chan Roy Chemaly Benny Chen Jerry Cheng Linzhao Cheng Bruce Cheson Mark Chiang Athar Chishti Hearn Cho Magdalena Chrzanowska-Wodnicka Richard E. Clark Joseph Connors Kenneth Cooke Miguel Cruz Adam Cuker Sandeep Dave Janice Davis Sproul Lucia De Franceschi Philip De Groot Rodney DeKoter Richard Delarue Stephen Devereux Steven Devine Paola Jorge Di Don Diamond Meletios Dimopoulos John DiPersio Angela Dispenzieri Benjamin Djulbegovic Jing-fei Dong James Downing William Drobyski Rafael Duarte Charles Dumontet Kieron Dunleavy Brian Durie Dimitar Efremov Elizabeth Eklund Jonas Emsley Patricia Ernst Andrew Evens Chris Fegan Andrew Feldman Giuliana Ferrari Willem Fibbe Adele Fielding Thoas Fioretos Robert Flaumenhaft Rafael Fonseca James Foran Joseph Frank Janet Franklin Paul Frenette Alan Friedman Terry Fry Saghi Gaffari Naomi Galili Patrick Gallagher Anne Galy David Garcia Randy Gascoyne Cristina Gasparetto Norbert Gattermann Tobias Gedde-Dahl Alan Gewirtz Francis Giles Robert Godal Lucy Godley Ivana Gojo Norbert Gorin Andre Goy Eric Grabowski Steven Grant Timothy Graubert Elizabeth Griffiths H. Leighton Grimes Claudia Haferlach Corinne Haioun Parameswaran Hari Christine Harrison Robert Hasserjian Nyla Heerema Shelly Heimfeld Roland Herzog Elizabeth Hexner Teru Hideshima William H. Hildebrand Gerhard Hildebrandt Devendra Hiwase Karin Hoffmeister Donna Hogge Scott Howard Brian Huntly Hiroto Inaba Baba Inusa Shai Izraeli Suresh Jhanwar Amy Johnson Craig Jordan Joseph Jurcic Nina Kadan-Lottick Lawrence Kaplan Jonathan Kaufman Neil Kay Michelle Kelliher Craig Kessler H. Jean Khoury Allison King Joseph Kiss Issay Kitabayashi Robert Klaassen Christoph Klein Yoshihisa Kodera Alexander Kohlmann Barbara Konkle Michael Kovacs Robert Kralovics Amrita Krishnan Nicolaus Kroger Ashish Kumar Ralf Küppers Jeffery Kutok Ann LaCasce Raymond Lai David Lane Peter Lane Richard Larson Michelle Le Beau Gregoire Le Gal Ollivier Legrand Suzanne Lentzsch John Leonard John Levine Ross Levine Linheng Li Renhao Li Zhenyu Li Wendy Lim Charles Linker Jeffrey Lipton Per Ljungman John Lollar Philip Low David Lucas Selina Luger Leo Luznik Gary Lyman Jaroslaw Maciejewski Elizabeth MacIntyre Nigel Mackman Luca Malcovati Guido Marcucci Tomer Mark Susan Maroney Giovanni Martinelli Peter Maslak Alan Mast Grant McArthur Philip McCarthy Michael McDevitt Peter McLaughlin Bruno Medeiros Jules P.P. Meijerink Junia Melo Thomas Mercher Bradley Messmer Marco Mielcarek Ken Mills Shin Mineishi Arturo Molina Silvia Montoto Marie Joelle Mozziconacci Auayporn Nademanee Vesna Najfeld Eneida Nemecek Ellis Neufeld Peter Newburger Heyu Ni Charlotte Marie Niemeyer Yago Nieto Anne Novak Paul O\'Donnell Vivian Oehler Fritz Offner Johannes Oldenburg Rebecca Olin Richard J. O'Reilly Thomas Ortel Keiya Ozawa Rose Ann Padua Sung-Yun Pai James Palis Derwood Pamphilon Animesh Pardanani Farzana Pashankar Andrea Pellagatti Catherine Pellat-Deceunynck Louis Pelus Chris Pepper Melanie Percy Andrew Perkins Luke Peterson Andrew Pettitt Javier Pinilla-Ibarz Kimmo Porkka David Porter Amy Powers Claude Preudhomme Frederick Racke Margaret Ragni Thomas Raife Alessandro Rambaldi Mariusz Ratajczak Pavan Reddy Mary Relling Tannishtha Reya Lisa Rimsza Stefano Rivella Isabelle Riviere Pamela Robey Gail Roboz Aldo Roccaro Maria Alma Rodriguez Frank Rosenbauer Laura Rosinol Alan Rosmarin Giuseppe Saglio Jonathan Said Valeria Santini Ravindra Sarode Yogenthiran Saunthararajah Bipin Savani Alan Schechter Charles Schiffer Robert Schlossman Laurie Sehn Rita Selby Orhan Sezer Sadhna Shankar John Shaughnessy Jordan Shavit Kevin Sheehan Shalini Shenoy Colin Sieff Paul Simmons Seema Singhal Sonali Smith Gerard Socie Pieter Sonneveld Simona Soverini David Spaner Steven Spitalnik Kostas Stamatopoulos David Steensma Richard Stone Toshio Suda Perumal Thiagarajan Courtney Thornburg Rodger Tiedemann David Traver Guido Tricot Darrell Triulzi Suzanne Trudel Christel Van Geet Karin Vanderkerken David Varon Amit Verma Srdan Verstovsek Ravi Vij Dan Vogl Loren Walensky Edmund Waller George Weiner Daniel Weisdorf Karl Welte Peter Westervelt Adrian Wiestner P.W. Wijermans John Wingard Anne Woolfrey Mingjiang Xu Qing Yi Anas Younes Ryan Zarychanski Arthur Zelent Clive Zent Dong-Er Zhang Xianzheng Zhou James Zimring
APA, Harvard, Vancouver, ISO, and other styles
We offer discounts on all premium plans for authors whose works are included in thematic literature selections. Contact us to get a unique promo code!

To the bibliography