Academic literature on the topic 'Wagner's Store'

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Journal articles on the topic "Wagner's Store"

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Harvey, Jonathan. "How do I compose? (Reflections on Wagner Dream)." Circuit 18, no. 1 (April 29, 2008): 38–43. http://dx.doi.org/10.7202/017907ar.

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Abstract Written in May of 2007, in this text Jonathan Harvey reflects on his compositional method by returning to the genesis of his opera Wagner Dream. He notably addresses such things as: the personal associations connected to the first note played by the horn; the conceptual logic behind the two main harmonic spaces; the effect of a heavy storm in one of the places he composed; and what he drew from Wagner’s work and ideas for his own opera.
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Rainwater, Crescent. "Netta Syrett, Nobody’s Fault, and Female Decadence: The Story of a Wagnerite." Journal of Victorian Culture 25, no. 2 (December 14, 2019): 185–99. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/jvcult/vcz057.

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Abstract Scholars have traditionally associated decadence with misogyny, and therefore it has typically been perceived as antithetical to feminism. Nobody’s Fault (1896), Netta Syrett’s first novel, complicates this perception through the way in which the self-assertive protagonist, Bridget Ruan, finds in the decadent music of Richard Wagner a liberating form of aesthetic experience. In this essay, I argue that encountering Wagner’s music marks Bridget’s immersion into a form of decadent culture that affirms her aesthetic longings and awakens her erotic desires. At the same time, the novel condemns an antifeminist form of decadence that is associated with elitist male artists who indulge in a superficial manipulation of language and treat women as art objects. The novel’s resistance to exclusionary forms of aesthetic experience is modelled in its straightforward narrative style and strategic engagement with familiar New Woman themes. This middlebrow narrative thus made Syrett’s intervention into debates about women and decadence accessible to a middle-class female audience. When we recognize that the history of decadence includes its appeal to feminist writers such as Syrett rather than an exclusively antifeminist legacy, we can begin to uncover a more nuanced history of feminism and decadence in England at the fin de siècle.
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Birladeanu, Ludmila. "The Story of the Wagner-Meerwein Rearrangement." Journal of Chemical Education 77, no. 7 (July 2000): 858. http://dx.doi.org/10.1021/ed077p858.

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Bennett, Linda. ": The Stone Carvers . Marjorie Hunt, Paul Wagner." American Anthropologist 88, no. 4 (December 1986): 1047–48. http://dx.doi.org/10.1525/aa.1986.88.4.02a01070.

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Shodell, E. "Hunt and Wagner, The Stone Carvers (Film)." Oral History Review 16, no. 1 (March 1, 1988): 198–200. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/ohr/16.1.198.

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Norina, Natal'ya Viktorovna. "IDEOLOGICAL AND ARTISTIC ORIGINALITY OF N. P. WAGNER’S STORY “NEW YEAR”." Philological Sciences. Issues of Theory and Practice, no. 9 (September 2019): 49–56. http://dx.doi.org/10.30853/filnauki.2019.9.10.

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Gutman, Roee, Itzhak Choshniak, and Noga Kronfeld-Schor. "Defending body mass during food restriction in Acomys russatus: a desert rodent that does not store food." American Journal of Physiology-Regulatory, Integrative and Comparative Physiology 290, no. 4 (April 2006): R881—R891. http://dx.doi.org/10.1152/ajpregu.00156.2005.

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Golden spiny mice, which inhabit rocky deserts and do not store food, must therefore employ physiological means to cope with periods of food shortage. Here we studied the physiological means used by golden spiny mice for conserving energy during food restriction and refeeding and the mechanism by which food consumption may influence thermoregulatory mechanisms and metabolic rate. As comparison, we studied the response to food restriction of another rocky desert rodent, Wagner’s gerbil, which accumulates large seed caches. Ten out of 12 food-restricted spiny mice (resistant) were able to defend their body mass after an initial decrease, as opposed to Wagner’s gerbils ( n = 6). Two of the spiny mice (nonresistant) kept losing weight, and their food restriction was halted. In four resistant and two nonresistant spiny mice, we measured heart rate, body temperature, and oxygen consumption during food restriction. The resistant spiny mice significantly ( P < 0.05) reduced energy expenditure and entered daily torpor. The nonresistant spiny mice did not reduce their energy expenditure. The gerbils’ response to food restriction was similar to that of the nonresistant spiny mice. Resistant spiny mice leptin levels dropped significantly ( n = 6, P < 0.05) after 24 h of food restriction, and continued to decrease throughout food restriction, as did body fat. During refeeding, although the golden spiny mice gained fat, leptin levels were not correlated with body mass ( r2 = 0.014). It is possible that this low correlation allows them to continue eating and accumulate fat when food is plentiful.
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Vetter, Isolde. "Zum letzten Male: Wagner did sell his ,Dutchman' story..." Die Musikforschung 40, no. 1 (September 22, 2021): 33–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.52412/mf.1987.h1.1378.

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Tiebel, Katharina, Franka Huth, Nico Frischbier, and Sven Wagner. "Correction to: Restrictions on natural regeneration of storm‑felled spruce sites by silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) through limitations in fructification and seed dispersal." European Journal of Forest Research 140, no. 5 (August 13, 2021): 1299. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/s10342-021-01404-w.

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The article “Restrictions on natural regeneration of storm-felled spruce sites by silver birch (Betula pendula Roth) through limitations in fructification and seed dispersal”, written by Katharina Tiebel, Franka Huth, Nico Frischbier and Sven Wagner, was originally published Online First without Open Access.
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Arikati, Srinivasa R., and Kurt Mehlhorn. "A correctness certificate for the Stoer–Wagner min-cut algorithm." Information Processing Letters 70, no. 5 (June 1999): 251–54. http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0020-0190(99)00071-x.

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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Wagner's Store"

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Wagner-Storz, Iris Alexa [Verfasser], and Ralf S. [Akademischer Betreuer] Müller. "Immuntherapie der caninen atopischen Dermatitis mit Gelatinenanopartikel-gebundenen CpG Oligodesoxynukleotiden / Iris Alexa Wagner-Storz ; Betreuer: Ralf S. Müller." München : Universitätsbibliothek der Ludwig-Maximilians-Universität, 2016. http://d-nb.info/1138195707/34.

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Books on the topic "Wagner's Store"

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Bags to riches: The story of I.J. Wagner. Salt Lake City, UT: University of Utah Press, 2006.

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Jaffe, D. J. The Jaffe, Solsky, Stohn, Belgard, Davis, Wagner, Gommermann, Pelzer, Flores, Salazar, Sanchez, Alper, German, Kanow, Bachner, Bressler and other families related to Dominique, Danielle and Bosco. New York, NY: D.J. Jaffe, 1997.

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Kilbrun, N. The Story of Wagners "Ring". Reprint Services Corp, 1999.

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Dykes, Pete. Kinnie Wagner Story. Pete Dykes, 2007.

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Frost, Henry. The Wagner Story Book. 1st World Library - Literary Society, 2006.

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Frost, Henry. The Wagner Story Book. 1st World Library, 2004.

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Frost, Henry. The Wagner Story Book. 1st World Library - Literary Society, 2004.

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Frost, William Henry. The Wagner Story Book. IndyPublish.com, 2005.

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Frost, Henry William. The Wagner Story Book. IndyPublish, 2007.

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Frost, Henry William. The Wagner Story Book. IndyPublish, 2006.

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Book chapters on the topic "Wagner's Store"

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SCRUTON, ROGER. "Wagner’s Treatment of the Story." In Death-Devoted Heart, 35–74. Oxford University Press, 2004. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/acprof:oso/9780195166910.003.0003.

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Huddleston, Andrew. "Introduction." In Nietzsche on the Decadence and Flourishing of Culture, 1–10. Oxford University Press, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1093/oso/9780198823674.003.0010.

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In 1872 the young Basel Professor Friedrich Nietzsche, then among the most promising philologists of his day, shocked the scholarly community with the publication of The Birth of Tragedy. In his first book, filled with more fervor than footnotes, Nietzsche dispensed with the cautious, measured claims that were expected of works in Classics and spun a bold narrative about the origins and decline of Attic Greek tragedy. However striking Nietzsche’s historical story was, classical history for its own sake was never Nietzsche’s aim. Modern cultural health was at this point his paramount concern, and he looked to the ancient world for lessons about the modern one. In the person of Richard Wagner, to whom the book is effusively dedicated, Nietzsche saw someone who might bring together a fragmented and directionless modern society through the creation of a new mythology. Such a mythology would give renewed meaning and purpose to human life, and revitalize a flagging culture, where religious belief was on the wane. The centerpiece of this revival would be a new festival, modeled on the Greek tragic festival of yore. With these great, almost absurd, ambitions for Wagner, and for a renewed form of high culture with the potential to transform modern society, it is little surprise that Nietzsche’s hopes were dashed....
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Vas-Deyres, Natacha. "Jean-Claude Dunyach, Poet of the Flesh." In Lingua Cosmica, 39–51. University of Illinois Press, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.5622/illinois/9780252041754.003.0003.

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Jean-Claude Dunyach, born in 1957, has published more than a hundred short stories in a career of over thirty years. He belongs to a generation of contemporary French science-fiction writers that includes figures such as Roland C. Wagner, Emmanuel Jouanne, and Jean-Marc Ligny. At a time when French science fiction was struggling to explore new ways of storytelling influenced by surrealism or the Nouveau Roman, this generation has given science fiction new life by mixing a hard-science approach with the supernatural, fantasy and the fantastic, while paying glowing tributes to authors of the Golden Age of Anglo-Saxon sf: Duntach’s influences include Samuel Delany, Ray Bradbury, and more particularly, J. G. Ballard. The specificity of Dunyach consists of making metaphysical concepts tangible for the reader by giving them a symbolic substance: time itself becomes tangible as a sea of sand, stone, ashes, sea water; love stories can be petrified as semiprecious stones and worn as trophies—even the universe itself complies as a sheet of paper or a piece of cloth that can be creased. The characters in his short stories are hurt or twisted, often with cracks in their past, but they still act as links between the individual and the collective: for Dunyach, any kind of system—in particular a political one—can be defined by the way it deals with marginality. Dunyach favors an individual point of view for a better detection of the system’s weaknesses (cities, societies, religions, or relationships with time and death). In that respect, the most accomplished characters in his work are the “AnimalCities”: these living, extraterrestrial, city-shaped animals made of flesh and cartilage travel through space from node to node on the web of the universe. Their symbiotic liaison with humanity gradually leads humans to understand the global nature of reality.
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Conference papers on the topic "Wagner's Store"

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Aksongur, Alev Kacar, Seher Eken, and Metin O. Kaya. "Aerolelastic Analysis of a Thin-Walled Composite Aircraft Wing With an External Store Subjected to a Follower Force." In ASME 2014 International Mechanical Engineering Congress and Exposition. American Society of Mechanical Engineers, 2014. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/imece2014-38479.

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This study reports dynamic aeroelastic analyses of an aircraft wing with an attached mass subjected a lateral follower force in an incompressible flow. A swept thin-walled composite beam with a biconvex cross-section is used as the structural model that incorporates a number of non-classical effects such as material anisotropy, transverse shear deformation and warping restraint. A symmetric lay-up configuration i.e. circumferentially asymmetric stiffness (CAS) is further adapted to this model to generate the coupled motion of flapwise bending-torsion-transverse shear. For this beam model, the unsteady aerodynamic loads are expressed using Wagners function in the time-domain as well as using Theodorsen function in the frequency-domain. The flutter speeds are evaluated for several ply angles and the effects of follower force, transverse shear, fiber-orientation and sweep angle on the aeroelastic instabilities are further discussed.
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Hermundstad, Ole A., Carl T. Stansberg, and O̸yvind Hellan. "Numerical and Experimental Analysis of Extreme Slamming Loads on FPSO Bows." In ASME 2002 21st International Conference on Offshore Mechanics and Arctic Engineering. ASMEDC, 2002. http://dx.doi.org/10.1115/omae2002-28565.

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A practical method for prediction of slamming loads and structural responses in the bow of an FPSO is presented. Incoming waves are simulated by a second-order random wave model, which describes the water elevation and kinematics. Vessel motions are calculated by linear analysis. The diffracted wave field is calculated taking into account linear 3D diffraction. Relative motions are then estimated by combining the linear vessel motions, second-order incoming waves and linear diffraction. The relative motions and velocities at the bow are used as input to numerical slamming calculations. The bow is divided into 2D sections and a boundary value problem is solved for each section applying the generalized Wagner-method of Zhao & Faltinsen (1993) and Zhao et al (1996). The 2D slamming calculations account for the local pile-up of water on each side of the section during impact. Structural responses are calculated from a finite-element model of the bow using the exact pressure distribution from the slamming calculations. This is achieved by automatic mapping of pressures onto the outer surface of the FE-model and performing a quasi-static structural analysis for each time-step. The methods are implemented into a package of computer tools, allowing the user to perform the various steps in the process with little manual editing of data. The system runs easily on a standard PC. Measurements on a 1:55 scaled model of an FPSO are used for validation of the bow slamming calculations. The model was equipped with five 3.85m × 1.65m (full-scale) panels in the upper part of the bow for slamming force measurements. The tests were run in storm conditions with steep waves. The calculated slamming force on a panel located at the foremost tip of the bulwark, 12.8 meters above the mean waterline, is compared with measured results for selected extreme slamming events. Considering the complexity of this problem and the relative simplicity of the approach, the agreement is very good.
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