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1

Dalton, Sheila. Blowing holes through the everyday. London, Ont: Books on Disk, 1995.

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2

Dalton, Sheila. Blowing holes through the everyday. London, Ont: HMS Press, 1993.

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3

Keskar, Ravindra. Square pegs in round holes: Mathematics through origami. New Delhi: Vigyan Prasar, 2000.

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4

Wheaton, John. Ground-water flow through inadequately plugged coal exploration bore holes. Bozeman, MT: Montana University System, Water Resource Center, 1996.

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5

Whitehill-Bashan, Robert. Sṭeps be-ḥorim sheḥorim: Shirim = Tap dancing through black holes : poems. [Tel Aviv]: ha-Ḳibuts ha-meʼuḥad, 2014.

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6

Jones, Marie D. This book is from the future: A journey through portals, relativity, worm holes, and other adventures in time travel. Pompton Plains, NJ: New Page Books, 2012.

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7

Looking through ancestors' eye-holes: Epistemic, body-mind-spirit and ethical discourse formations among the Lau'um of West Sepik, Papua New Guinea. Papua New Guinea: UPING Press and Bookshop, 2010.

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8

Packard, Edward. Through the black hole. Milwaukee: Gareth Stevens, 1995.

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9

Frank, Bolle, ed. Through the Black Hole: Choose Your Own Adventure #97. New York: Bantam Books, 1990.

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10

Espinosa, Lina. A través del cuerpo: Dibujos de luz = Through the body : light drawings. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Artes y Humanidades, 2008.

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11

Espinosa, Lina. A través del cuerpo: Dibujos de luz = Through the body : light drawings. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Artes y Humanidades, 2008.

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12

A través del cuerpo: Dibujos de luz = Through the body : light drawings. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Artes y Humanidades, 2008.

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13

Espinosa, Lina. A través del cuerpo: Dibujos de luz = Through the body : light drawings. Bogotá: Universidad de los Andes, Facultad de Artes y Humanidades, 2008.

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14

Packard, Edward. Through the Black Hole: U-Ventures. New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2012.

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15

Packard, Edward. Through the black hole. New York: Simon & Schuster Books for Young Readers, 2012.

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16

Sumners, Carolyn. An earthling's guide to deep space: Explore the galaxy through the eye of the Hubble Space Telescope. New York, NY: McGraw-Hill, 1999.

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17

moore, jessica Care. Sunlight Through Bullet Holes. Moore Black Press Publishing Inc., 2014.

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18

Dalton, Sheila. Blowing Holes Through the Everyday. HMS Press, 1996.

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19

W, Brown Kirk, and Hazardous Waste Engineering Research Laboratory, eds. Quantification of leak rates through holes in landfill liners. Cincinnati, OH: U. S. Environmental Protection Agency, Hazardous Waste Engineering Research Laboratory, 1987.

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20

Qualification of Leak Rates Through Holes in Landfill Liners (Pb 87-227666 Cbt). N.T.I.S., 1987.

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21

Blundell, Katherine. 2. Navigating through spacetime. Oxford University Press, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/actrade/9780199602667.003.0002.

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Mathematics is the perfect language needed for describing how the theory of relativity applies to the physical Universe and all of spacetime, and that description includes the strange behaviour that occurs near black holes. ‘Navigating through spacetime’ explains some of the complicated mathematical language using spacetime diagrams. It describes world-lines—the path left behind as an object journeys through spacetime—and light cones. Black holes profoundly affect the orientations of the light cones. As a particle approaches a black hole, its future light cone tilts more and more towards the black hole. When the particle crosses the event horizon, all of its possible future trajectories end inside the black hole.
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22

On holes and walls: Tailoring the magnetic properties of thin films through 2D nanopatterning. España: Prensas de la Universidad de Zaragoza, 2015.

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23

Belmont, Judith A., and Lora Shor. Swiss Cheese Theory of Life: How to Get Through Life's Holes Without Getting Stuck in Them! PESI, 2011.

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24

E, Arteaga Freddy, United States. Dept. of Energy. Nevada Operations Office, and Geological Survey (U.S.), eds. Hydrogeologic data from selected wells and test holes in and adjacent to the Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada, through 1986. Carson City, Nev: Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1991.

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25

E, Arteaga Freddy, United States. Dept. of Energy. Nevada Operations Office., and Geological Survey (U.S.), eds. Hydrogeologic data from selected wells and test holes in and adjacent to the Nevada Test Site, Nye County, Nevada, through 1986. Carson City, Nev: Dept. of the Interior, U.S. Geological Survey, 1991.

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26

Report on the search for atmosphere holes using AIRS image data: Final report covering the period 27 September 1990 through 26 September 1991. Bellevue, WA: NorthWest Research Associates, Inc., 1991.

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27

Harford Vargas, Jennifer. The Floating Dictatorship. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190642853.003.0004.

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This chapter focuses on the figure of the neoliberal dictator in Francisco Goldman’s The Ordinary Seaman, arguing that the white captain and first mate are capitalist dictators who use a marooned ship in an abandoned Brooklyn pier as their technology of domination. The novel depicts the shipowners as modern-day explorers, slave owners, and filibusterers who employ a group of Central Americans but never pay them and keep them trapped on the ship in fear of deportation. The shipwreck functions as a metaphor for the crew’s situation as well as a narrative device, and the novel’s discourse is structured through breakage and stranded temporality. The chapter ends by considering the multiple significations of scraps and holes in the novel, demonstrating how the ruinous holes of the shipwreck are repurposed and repaired in the novel through the narrative form as the crew piece together scraps of their narrative testimonies for a migrant community that offers them safe harbor.
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28

Richemond-Barak, Daphné. Underground Warfare. Oxford University Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780190457242.003.0002.

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This chapter builds on the past to learn about the future: How does today’s use of tunnels differ from yesterday’s? What will tomorrow’s underground warfare look like? These questions are answered through the historical narrative and a database of over 40 years of New York Times reports on the use of tunnels in conflict. The NYT data fills some of the holes left by the absence of literature and helps shape the first typology of tunnels. This chapter offers conceptual and analytical tools for understanding and contending with tunnel warfare. It also encapsulates one of the book’s major arguments that, absent a major technological breakthrough, underground warfare is likely to intensify and continue its rapid diffusion in the coming years, following a pattern resembling that of suicide terrorism.
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29

Hsu, Madeline Y. “The Anglo-Saxons of the Orient”. Princeton University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691164021.003.0002.

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This chapter begins with the story of Yung Kuai, a Chinese Educational Mission (CEM) student who graduated from Yale but remained in America for the rest of his life where he married a Euro-American woman and raised a biracial family, which he supported by working as a diplomat at the Chinese embassy. Yung Kuai's story reveals the holes in Asian exclusion, from the welcomed presence of the CEM in New England even at the height of the anti-Chinese movement in California, and highlights the efforts of Americans such as missionaries, educators, and diplomats who treated Chinese as culturally distinct yet malleable in ways that could be turned to advantage. Fears that unilaterally imposed immigration restrictions might damage relations with China meant that initial forays into imposing controls came through diplomatic negotiations.
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30

Leeb, Claudia. Disrupting the Fantasy. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780190639891.003.0008.

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“Disrupting the Fantasy: Adorno and the Working-Class Woman” exposes Adorno’s identity thinking in his figurations of the “working-class woman.” The forms in which she appears in Adorno’s texts (the phallic, castrating, and castrated woman) correspond to the three dimensions (the imaginary, the symbolic, and the real) through which Lacan mapped his thought. In all of these forms she advances to object petit a (Lacan)—the unconscious fantasy object that promises to cover up the fears and desires that non-wholeness incites. That the thinker of non-identity reinforces identity thinking exposes some of the challenges to realizing the idea of a (feminist) political subject-in-outline. For such a subject to be able to transform the status quo and remain inclusive, it must deal with the (unconscious) desires and fears the remaining-with-holes incites.
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31

Geue, Tom, and Elena Giusti, eds. Unspoken Rome. Cambridge University Press, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/9781108913843.

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Latin literature is a hotbed of holes and erasures. Its sensitivity to politics leaves it ripe for repression of all sorts of names, places and historical events, while its dense allusivity appears to hide interpretative clues in a network of texts that only the reader's consciousness can make present. This volume showcases innovative approaches to the field of Latin literature, all of which are refracted through this prism of absence, which functions as a fundamental generative force both for the hermeneutics and the ongoing literary aftermath of these texts. Reviewing and working with various influential approaches to textual absence, the contributors to Unspoken Rome treat these texts as silent types, listening out for what they do not say, and how they do not speak, whilst also tracing the ill-defined borders within which scholars and modern authors are legitimized to fill in the silences around which they are built.
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32

Alvesson, Mats, Yiannis Gabriel, and Roland Paulsen. Methodologies and Writings that Turn into Black Holes of Meaning. Oxford University Press, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198787099.003.0005.

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The training and socialization of social science researchers encourages a quest of tiny gaps in which to make contributions, membership of academic microtribes, a language full of jargon, and a near total indifference to the wider meaning or purpose of their work. Bad habits are reinforced by the review process which encourages further use of jargon, extensive digressions, esoteric arguments, the splitting of hairs, and a general indifference to social meaning and purpose. Almost any trivial or commonsensical observation can be blown up and made into something significant and impressive through the use of grandiose but often deceptive and meaningless labels. Empirical material, whether qualitative or quantitative, is routinely deployed to reinforce existing assumptions rather than to test them. While these trends are not entirely new in social science publications, they have assumed far greater dominance and significance.
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33

Handron, Kerry, and Carolyn Sumners. An Earthling's Guide to Deep Space: Explore the Galaxy Through the Eye of the Huble Space Telescope. McGraw-Hill, 1998.

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