In this thoughtful study, Phillip Goldstein shows how the valuation of aesthetics in literary criticism has become increasingly complicated in recent decades. Contemporary readers not only need to look at the text's figures and structure, or the author's intention but must take various media, including television, movies, magazines, and newspapers; as well as the sexuality, gender, race, or nationality of the author, media, or text into account.
This book of mathematical brain teasers was first published as1917 to satisfy popular demand, as Dudeney’s puzzles regularly appeared in newspapers and magazines.
In Early Modern Britain, new publication channels were developed and new textual genres established themselves. News discourse became increasingly more important and reached wider audiences, with pamphlets as the first real mass media. Newspapers appeared, first on a weekly and then on a daily basis. And scientific news discourse in the form of letters exchanged between fellow scholars turned into academic journals. The papers in this volume provide state-of-the art analyses of these developments.
USA Today (trademarked as USA TODAY in capitals) is a national American daily newspaper published by the Gannett Company. The paper has the widest circulation of any newspaper in the United States (averaging over 2.11 million[1] copies every weekday), and among English-language broadsheets, it comes second worldwide, behind only the 3.14 million daily paid copies of The Times of India.[2] USA Today is distributed in all fifty states, Canada, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, and Guam.
History Behind the Headlines - The Origins of Conflicts Worldwide
Added by: jgy777ph | Karma: 31.86 | Other | 12 June 2009
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In 1991 the world witnessed a political change of great magnitude. The Union of Soviet Socialist Republics (USSR) crumbled, ushering in a new era of democracy and the official end of the Cold War.
History Behind the Headlines (HBH), a new, ongoing series from the Gale Group strives to answer these and many other questions in a way that television broadcasts and newspapers cannot.
Edited by: IrinaM - 11 June 2009
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