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This book introduces a novel approach to discrete optimization,
providing both theoretical insights and algorithmic developments
that lead to improvements over state-of-the-art technology. The
authors present chapters on the use of decision diagrams for
combinatorial optimization and constraint programming, with
attention to general-purpose solution methods as well as
problem-specific techniques. The book will be useful for
researchers and practitioners in discrete optimization and
constraint programming. "Decision Diagrams for Optimization is one
of the most exciting developments emerging from constraint
programming in recent years. This book is a compelling summary of
existing results in this space and a must-read for optimizers
around the world." [Pascal Van Hentenryck]
This book introduces a novel approach to discrete optimization,
providing both theoretical insights and algorithmic developments
that lead to improvements over state-of-the-art technology. The
authors present chapters on the use of decision diagrams for
combinatorial optimization and constraint programming, with
attention to general-purpose solution methods as well as
problem-specific techniques. The book will be useful for
researchers and practitioners in discrete optimization and
constraint programming. "Decision Diagrams for Optimization is one
of the most exciting developments emerging from constraint
programming in recent years. This book is a compelling summary of
existing results in this space and a must-read for optimizers
around the world." [Pascal Van Hentenryck]
In The Poetry of Disturbance, David Bergman argues that post-war
poetry underwent a significant if subtle shift in emphasis, moving
from the modernist concern with the poem as a visual text to one
that was chiefly oral in nature. The resulting change was
disturbing, especially for those brought up on the principles of
high modernism. This new stress on orality implied a shift in the
economy of the poem, away from the austerity of language advocated
by Pound and Eliot to a style that conveyed freedom, expansiveness,
and an innovative directness.
The members of the literary circle known as the Violet Quill --
Andrew Holleran, Felice Picano, Edmund White, Christopher Cox,
Michael Grumley, Robert Ferro, and George Whitmore -- collectively
represent the aspirations and the achievement of gay writing during
and after the gay liberation movement. David Bergman's social
history shows how the works of these authors reflected, advanced,
and criticized the values, principles, and prejudices of the
culture of gay liberation. In spinning many of the most important
stories gay men told of themselves in the short period between the
1969 Stonewall Riots and the devastation of the AIDS epidemic
during the 1980s, the Violet Quill exerted an enormous influence on
gay culture. The death toll of the AIDS epidemic, including four of
the Violet Quill's seven members, has made putting such recent
events into a historical context all the more important and
difficult. The work of the Violet Quill expresses the joy,
suffering, grief, hope, activism, and caregiving of their
generation. "The Violet Hour" meets the urgent need for a history
of the men who bore witness not only to the birth but also to the
decimation of a culture.
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Shades & Graces (Paperback)
Michael Salcman; Introduction by David Bergman; Preface by Lee Slonimsky
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R362
R301
Discovery Miles 3 010
Save R61 (17%)
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Ships in 10 - 15 working days
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The Book of Lies (Paperback)
Felice Picano; Foreword by David Bergman
bundle available
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R656
R560
Discovery Miles 5 600
Save R96 (15%)
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In the first anthology to survey the full range of gay men's
autobiographical writing from Walt Whitman to the present, ""Gay
American Autobiography"" draws excerpts from letters, journals,
oral histories, memoirs, and autobiographies to provide examples of
the best life writing over the last century and a half. Volume
editor David Bergman guides the reader chronologically through
selected writings that give voice to every generation of gay
writers since the nineteenth century, including a diverse array of
American men of African, European, Jewish, Asian, and Latino
heritage. Documenting a range of life experiences that encompass
tattoo artists and academics, composers and drag queens, hustlers
and clerks, it contains accounts of turn-of-the-century
transvestites, gay rights activists, men battling AIDS, and
soldiers attempting to come out in the army. Each selection
provides important insight on the wide spectrum of ways gay men
have defined and lived their lives, highlighting how self-awareness
changes an author's experience. The volume includes an introduction
by Bergman and headnotes for each of the nearly forty entries.
Bringing many out-of-print and hard-to-find works to new readers,
this challenging and comprehensive anthology chronicles American
gay history and life struggles over the course of the past 150
years.
Long before Stonewall, young Air Force veteran Edward Field, fresh
from combat in WWII, threw himself into New York's literary
bohemia, searching for fulfillment as a gay man and poet. In this
vivid account of his avant-garde years in Greenwich Village and the
bohemian outposts of Paris' Left Bank and Tangier - where you could
write poetry, be radical, and be openly gay - Field's intimate
portraits of literary contemporaries such as Susan Sontag, Alfred
Chester, May Swenson, and Frank O'Hara bring back the sadness,
bawdiness, humor, and romanticism of the nigh-forgotten postwar
bohemian subculture.
The members of the literary circle known as the Violet Quill --
Andrew Holleran, Felice Picano, Edmund White, Christopher Cox,
Michael Grumley, Robert Ferro, and George Whitmore -- collectively
represent the aspirations and the achievement of gay writing during
and after the gay liberation movement. David Bergman's social
history shows how the works of these authors reflected, advanced,
and criticized the values, principles, and prejudices of the
culture of gay liberation. In spinning many of the most important
stories gay men told of themselves in the short period between the
1969 Stonewall Riots and the devastation of the AIDS epidemic
during the 1980s, the Violet Quill exerted an enormous influence on
gay culture. The death toll of the AIDS epidemic, including four of
the Violet Quill's seven members, has made putting such recent
events into a historical context all the more important and
difficult. The work of the Violet Quill expresses the joy,
suffering, grief, hope, activism, and caregiving of their
generation. "The Violet Hour" meets the urgent need for a history
of the men who bore witness not only to the birth but also to the
decimation of a culture.
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