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The Curator's Handbook is the essential practical handbook for
curators and curatorial students, mapping out every stage of the
exhibition-making process from initial idea to final installation.
In his introduction, Adrian George traces the history of curating
back to its origins in the 17th century and outlines the
multifarious roles of the curator today, including as custodian,
interpreter, educator, facilitator and organizer. Twelve chapters
then chart the various stages of the exhibition process in
invaluable detail and clear, informative language - from initial
concept to writing contracts and loan requests, putting together
budgets and schedules, producing exhibition catalogues and
interpretation materials, designing gallery spaces, working with
artists, lenders and art handlers, organizing private views, and
documenting and evaluating a show. A distinguished cast of
international museum directors and curators offer advice and tips.
Colonial Geopolitics and Local Cultures in the Hellenistic and
Roman East (3rd century BC - 3rd century AD) presents contributions
taken in the main from a panel held during the Celtic Conference in
Classics 2014 (Edinburgh, Scotland, June 25-28th 2014), but also
incorporates a number of papers given previously at another panel
which convened at Mamaia (Romania, September 23-27th, 2012). What
changes in the material culture can we observe, when a state is
overwhelming a local population with soldiers, katoikoi, and civil
officials or merchants? One of the main concerns of local
geopolitics was the central question of how agricultural land was
distributed to the Greek or Roman colonists after it had been
seized from the native population? In what way did the state watch
over and administer the colonised territories? What were the exact
social, legal, cultural and political relationships between the
natives and the newcomers? Did the language of the colonists
dominate the local vernacular language or not, and in what way? Did
onomastics change or not in particular regions over centuries? What
were the mutual influences between native and colonial cultures?
This collection addresses these questions, focusing on the
Hellenistic and Roman East.
Mircea Malitza, a career diplomat from Romania, witnessed and
participated in major events during the entire Cold War period. An
engaging personality, he earned respect from world leaders in the
United States, Western Europe and emerging post-colonial countries.
This account is noteworthy for its rare insights into a duality not
always apparent when seen through the Cold War lens of Western
eyes. There is, on the one hand, the subservience of Romania, and
the entire Soviet Bloc, to Russia's dogmas and imperial
aspirations. On the other hand, Romania's leaders crafted their own
national 'independent path, ' often in highly creative and
potentially dangerous ways. This served Romania well in opening
doors to favorable Western contact, culminating, during the
mid-1960s, in a period of 'liberalization' of internal and foreign
policies. In time, though, these achievements were undermined by
Nicolae Ceausescu's increasingly dictatorial and cruel slide into a
moral and economic abyss. In these memoirs, Ambassador Malitza's
recollections of the Cuban Missile Crisis are illuminating: he
provides unique eye witness testimony to both the public posturing
and tense behind-the-scenes diplomacy as the world was taken to the
brink of nuclear war - he is the sole surviving member of the UN
Security Council of that time. Revealing, too, are Malitza's
accounts of the dramatic day-by-day events and secret conspiracies
of the invasion of Czechoslovakia in 1968-and how Romania avoided a
similar fate. The author reveals his encounters and professional
friendships with world leaders. Private conversations with Averell
Harriman - America's master diplomat with unique insights into
Russia's policies - are unexpected. So, too, is the relationship
with UN Secretary General U-Thant. A unique memoir written in a
lively voice, and translated for this edition with great
sensitivity to nuance and subtle humor, this book should please
both the casual reader and the specialist.
A general framework has been developed to investigate dynamic
stability of composite plates under dynamic and static compressive
loads. A variationally consistent, higher-order shear deformation
theory has been used to model the displacement field. The linear
strain-displacement relationship corresponding to the small
deformation assumption is used first. Both transverse shear and
rotary inertia effects are taken into account. The mathematical
model is implemented using the finite element approach. The impact
of delamination on the natural frequencies, critical buckling load,
and instability regions is investigated Parametric studies are
conducted to investigate the influence of delamination placement
and size, boundary conditions, plate thickness, static pre-stress,
and stacking sequence on the instability regions. Finally, the
importance of geometric nonlinearity is studied by introducing von
Krmn nonlinearity. Natural frequency results are obtained for
square isotropic and cross-ply laminates and compared with
available analytical data. The effect of geometric nonlinearity on
the principal instability region is also investigated for cross-ply
laminates.
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