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The chapters in this monograph are contributions from the Advances
in Quantum Monte Carlo symposium held at Pacifichem 2010,
International Chemical Congress of Pacific Basin Societies. The
symposium was dedicated to celebrate the career of James B.
Anderson, a notable researcher in the field. Quantum Monte Carlo
provides an ab initio solution to the Schroedinger equation by
performing a random walk through configuration space in imaginary
time. Benchmark calculations suggest that its most commonly-used
variant, "fixed-node" diffusion Monte Carlo, estimates energies
with an accuracy comparable to that of high-level coupled-cluster
calculations. These two methods, each having advantages and
disadvantages, are complementary "gold-standards" of quantum
chemistry. There are challenges facing researchers in the field,
several of which are addressed in the chapters in this monograph.
These include improving the accuracy and precision of quantum Monte
Carlo calculations; understanding the exchange nodes and utilizing
the simulated electron distribution; extending the method to large
and/or experimentally-challenging systems; and developing hybrid
molecular mechanics/dynamics and Monte Carlo algorithms.
Unlike some other reproductions of classic texts (1) We have not
used OCR(Optical Character Recognition), as this leads to bad
quality books with introduced typos. (2) In books where there are
images such as portraits, maps, sketches etc We have endeavoured to
keep the quality of these images, so they represent accurately the
original artefact. Although occasionally there may be certain
imperfections with these old texts, we feel they deserve to be made
available for future generations to enjoy.
Successful people and companies do two things at the same time:
they are efficient day to day "and" they see great new
opportunities. They use different styles of thinking and management
to deliver cash today, and sustainable growth tomorrow. "Wearing
Two Hats" is essential to business: but how and when to wear each
one?
This book is the first to explore the deep and lasting impacts of
the largest colonial trading company, the British East India
Company on the natural environment. The contributors - drawn from a
wide range of academic disciplines - illuminate the relationship
between colonial capital and the changing environment between 1600
and 1857.
The first collection focused on the writing of provocative author
and performance artist Sapphire, including her groundbreaking novel
PUSH that has since become the Academy-award-winning film Precious.
Once Upon a Time in a Different World, a unique addition to the
celebrated Children's Literature and Culture series, seeks to move
discussions and treatments of ideas in African America Children's
literature from the margins to the forefront of literary discourse.
Looking at a variety of topics, including the moralities of
heterosexism, the veneration of literacy, and the "politics of
hair," Neal A. Lester provides a scholarly and accessible
compilation of essays that will serve as an invaluable resource for
parents, students, and educators. The much-needed reexamination of
African American children's texts follows an engaging
call-and-response format, allowing for a lively and illuminating
discussion between its primary author and a diverse group of
contributors; including educators, scholars, students, parents, and
critics. In addition to these distinct dialogues, the book features
an enlightening generational conversation between Lester and his
teenage daughter as they review the same novels. With critical
assessments of Toni and Slade Morrison's The Big Box and The Book
of Mean People, bell hooks' Happy to Be Nappy, and Anne Schraff's
Until We Meet Again, among many other works, these provocative and
fresh essays yield a wealth of perspectives on the intersections of
identity formations in childhood and adulthood.
In their search for a relationship, whether long- or short-term,
how do desiring subjects signify their identities and those of
their desiring subjects? The essays in Racialized Politics of
Desire in Personal Ads take up this question by exploring how
writers of personal ads fashion themselves and those with whom they
seek a connection. More specifically, these essays explore the
politics of desire how complex intersections among the social
categories of race, gender and sexuality within personal ads reveal
a dynamic tapestry of power relations and hierarchies. By focusing
on how, in each instance, African Americans both construct and are
constructed discursively in the brief narrative space of personals,
this collection offers a substantively new genre-based exploration
of the politics of desire and makes an important contribution to
studies of language and self; identity politics; cultural studies;
gendered, sexualized and racialized discourses; and the performance
of everyday texts that occupy scholarly attention in a variety of
different disciplines. Those interested in American Cultural
Studies, African American Studies, Sociology, Communication,
Rhetoric, Queer Studies, Critical Race Theory, Women's Studies,
Gender Studies, and Race Relations on a professional or lay basis
will find this book informative and engaging."
In their search for a relationship, whether long- or short-term,
how do desiring subjects signify their identities and those of
their desiring subjects? The essays in Racialized Politics of
Desire in Personal Ads take up this question by exploring how
writers of personal ads fashion themselves and those with whom they
seek a connection. More specifically, these essays explore the
politics of desire_how complex intersections among the social
categories of race, gender and sexuality within personal ads reveal
a dynamic tapestry of power relations and hierarchies. By focusing
on how, in each instance, African Americans both construct and are
constructed discursively in the brief narrative space of personals,
this collection offers a substantively new genre-based exploration
of the politics of desire and makes an important contribution to
studies of language and self; identity politics; cultural studies;
gendered, sexualized and racialized discourses; and the performance
of everyday texts that occupy scholarly attention in a variety of
different disciplines. Those interested in American Cultural
Studies, African American Studies, Sociology, Communication,
Rhetoric, Queer Studies, Critical Race Theory, Women's Studies,
Gender Studies, and Race Relations on a professional or lay basis
will find this book informative and engaging.
Once Upon a Time in a Different World, a unique addition to the
celebrated Children's Literature and Culture series, seeks to move
discussions and treatments of ideas in African America Children's
literature from the margins to the forefront of literary discourse.
Looking at a variety of topics, including the moralities of
heterosexism, the veneration of literacy, and the "politics of
hair," Neal A. Lester provides a scholarly and accessible
compilation of essays that will serve as an invaluable resource for
parents, students, and educators. The much-needed reexamination of
African American children's texts follows an engaging
call-and-response format, allowing for a lively and illuminating
discussion between its primary author and a diverse group of
contributors; including educators, scholars, students, parents, and
critics. In addition to these distinct dialogues, the book features
an enlightening generational conversation between Lester and his
teenage daughter as they review the same novels. With critical
assessments of Toni and Slade Morrison's The Big Box and The Book
of Mean People, bell hooks' Happy to Be Nappy, and Anne Schraff's
Until We Meet Again, among many other works, these provocative and
fresh essays yield a wealth of perspectives on the intersections of
identity formations in childhood and adulthood.
This book is a volume in the Penn Press Anniversary Collection. To
mark its 125th anniversary in 2015, the University of Pennsylvania
Press rereleased more than 1,100 titles from Penn Press's
distinguished backlist from 1899-1999 that had fallen out of print.
Spanning an entire century, the Anniversary Collection offers
peer-reviewed scholarship in a wide range of subject areas.
The first collection focused on the writing of provocative author
and performance artist Sapphire, including her groundbreaking novel
PUSH that has since become the Academy-award-winning film Precious.
This book is the first to explore the deep and lasting impacts of
the largest colonial trading company, the British East India
Company on the natural environment. The contributors - drawn from a
wide range of academic disciplines - illuminate the relationship
between colonial capital and the changing environment between 1600
and 1857.
Successful people and companies do two things at the same time:
they are efficient day to day and they see great new opportunities.
They use different styles of thinking and management to deliver
cash today, and sustainable growth tomorrow. Wearing Two Hats is
essential to business: but how and when to wear each one?
This text offers a new interpretation of the dramatic changes that
occurred in women in medicine over the course of the last seventy
years, starting from the 1950s when women physicians were a
curiosity to the present day when their presence is accepted and
their achievements are broadly acknowledged. In seven chapters
arranged by decades, this book examines the seminal events that
shaped what has been described as "the changing face of medicine."
Using the lived experiences of women physicians featured as
vignettes throughout the narrative, the book traces the effects of
the quota system for admissions, second wave feminism and Title IX
legislation, the restrictions of the "glass ceiling," and a cascade
of "equity issues" in career advancement and salary to offer a new
account of the roles women played in shaping the standards and the
contributing to progress in the field of medicine. Women faced
gender specific challenges to enter, train and practice medicine
that did not abate as they strove to balance work and family. As
the book shows, such challenges and the attendant institutional
responses offered by medical schools and government rulings shaped
how women "do" medicine differently. Women and the Practice of
Medicine offers a unique interpretation of this history and
accounts for the changes in social norms as well as in women's
perspectives that have made them an invaluable "new normal" in the
contemporary world of medicine. This book fills a gap in the more
recent history of women in medicine, much of which is written by
academic historians or sociologists; this book contributes a
clinician's "on the ground" point of view. It includes a
researched, structured historical narrative spanning the last 70
years, but it seeks to frame this narrative with the personal
stories and accomplishments of women physicians who lived through
the time in question. The book also provides an overview of how
much has changed in the practice of medicine as well as a reminder
of what has not changed and what needs to further evolve for women
to be equitable partners in medicine as well as other professional
disciplines. The book concludes with two appendices containing a
questionnaire used in interviews of 40 women conducted at the start
of the book project, and a summary of the qualitative findings from
the semi-structured interviews.
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