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The People of the Abyss (Illustrated)

[DOC] The People of the Abyss (Illustrated) by Jack London at Arts-Photography

Description

Questo testo nasce dal desiderio di raggruppare le esperienze applicative e fare il punto sullo stato di avanzamento delle ricerche e delle sperimentazioni inerenti lrsquo;utilizzo di batteri applicati ai manufatti artistici. I batteri; cioegrave; microrganismi; comunemente confinati al ruolo di deteriogeni; si sono rivelati strumenti utili come agenti di biorimozione e bioconsolidamento per i manufatti artistici.Nonostante tale metodologia sia studiata da diversi decenni; anche nelle Universitagrave; e nei Centri di Ricerca italiani; ancora oggi risulta poco conosciuta e utilizzata. Questi atti di convegno permettono di fare il punto sullo stato dellrsquo;arte della ricerca sullrsquo;argomento; a questo scopo sono stati coinvolti ricercatori; restauratori e diagnosti provenienti da diversi ambiti di studio; che hanno esposto il loro lavoro; con la volontagrave; di fornire una pluralitagrave; di esperienze e contenuti provenienti da diversi contesti.Alcuni relatori che hanno partecipato al convegno; le cui relazioni sono pubblicate in questo volume; sono tra i primi ad aver utilizzato e studiato queste tecnologie nel nostro paese; altri sono giovani ricercatori o restauratori che stanno contribuendo a questo argomento con nuove ricerche e sperimentazioni.


#1305807 in eBooks 2014-04-10 2014-04-10File Name: B00J1ZJL3W


Review
7 of 7 people found the following review helpful. Ultimately disappointingBy Virginia E. DemarceMs. Dixon; who worked for some time (1985-1986) as an editor for Mills Boon and who remained a reader of the books the firm produces at the time she was writing this book; set out to defend the hypothesis that the romances issued by the publisher can legitimately be considered "feminist." This defense fails; ultimately; because the book does not present a systematic analysis of the overall production of the firm to underpin the authors statements.The general organization is chronological; with topical references within the chronological chapters. The author states that while researching; she "read roughly 30 books from each decade up until the 1950s while continuing to read some of the contemporary monthly Mills Boon publications." (p. 28)The most useful aspect of the book is its demonstration that the earlier years of the press; between World War I and World War II; produced at least some books that argued for womens working outside the home; even in professional careers and after marriage; and in favor of divorce law reform; etc. However; there is no indication as to what proportion of all the books published at that time took these stances. Many of her generalizations; such as "Heroes are no longer aristocratic after the 1910s" (p. 6); are not supported by the authors own descriptions of later-published books.While it may be an impression only; the book does leave the reader with the impression that the author is deliberately down-playing the impact of plot lines favored by popular authors such as Sara Seale (the heroine as helpless orphan with no qualification to earn her own living; see p. 113) and Penny Jordan (the hero as arrogant and abusive; see pp. 35-36). While not ignoring their existence; the theme of the passages discussing them tends to be along the lines of; "but that isnt all that Mills Boon were doing in those years."The author argues that partnership with the Canadian firm of Harlequin since the 1970s has been disadvantageous: "Harlequins authoritarian stance also negates the diversity in the storylines that has always been one of the strengths of Mills Boon which; under British management; was generally left to the author; which; according to Frances Whitehead; worked very well." (p. 24)There are two indexes--an "Index of Mills Boon Authors" including the titles discussed by Dixon; and a general index.

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