Perpetual Movement Sören Thiele-BruhnOffers both a production history and a close analysis, with a chapter for each of the film's eleven shots. The first book length study in English of Alfred Hitchcock's Rope (1948), Perpetual Movement offers both a production history that draws extensively upon little known archival materials, including set drawings and drafts of the screenplay, and a close examination of the film in which Neil Badmington analyzes each of Rope's eleven shots. Writing
it argues that academies reproduce rather than reform inequalities
Ali Kadri examines how over the last three decades the Arab world has undergone a process of developmental descent
auditing or working within a 3D printing service
briefly highlighting their etiology followed by possible nutritional interventions
continued to be read but she was barely remembered as a poet until the manuscript of her longest and greatest poem
Space is the ultimate canvas for the imagination
human error
to anarchist thought and praxis to investigate how they might complement each other
Their stories will strike home the experience of international adoption
This volume explores the characteristics of the art and literature of the Second Empire in France
then goes on to review modifying animal slurry pH to enhance its value as a biobased fertilizer through methods such as bio acidification and alkalinization
A highly personal meditation on the nature and meaning of suffering