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Showing 1 - 6 of 6 matches in All Departments
Writing and recording are key cultural activities that allow humans to communicate across time and space. Whereas Old World writing evolved into the alphabetic system that is now employed around the world, the indigenous peoples in the Americas autonomously developed alternative systems that conveyed knowledge in a tangible medium. New World systems range from the hieroglyphic script of the Maya, to the figural and iconic pictographies of the Aztecs, Mixtecs, and Zapotecs in Mexico and the Moche in Peru, to the abstract knotted khipus of the Andes. Like Old World writing, these systems represented a cultural category that was fundamental to the workings of their societies, one that was heavily impregnated with cultural value. The fifteen contributors to "Their Way of Writing: Scripts, Signs, and Pictographies in Pre-Columbian America" consider substantive and theoretical issues concerning writing and signing systems in the ancient Americas. They present the latest thinking about these graphic and tactile systems of communication. Their variety of perspectives and their advances in decipherment and understanding constitute a major contribution not only to our understanding of Pre-Columbian and indigenous American cultures but also to our comparative and global understanding of writing and literacy.
Fifth Revised Edition. With Names Of Members Tracing Descent Through Same. With Counter List, Names Of Members Followed By Names Of Huguenot Ancestors.
A literature-based study was conducted at the Building and Fire Research Laboratory of the National Institute of Standards and Technology, to compare characteristics and usage of steel, copper, chlorinated polyvinyl chloride and polybutylene fire sprinkler pipe primarily related to residential and light hazard installations. This report addresses key variables such as material properties, usage criteria and limitations, system design, installation requirements, economics, and maintenance.
Seventh Revised Edition. With Names Of Members Tracing Descent Through Same. With Counter List, Names Of Members Followed By Names Of Huguenot Ancestors.
Impulsivity features prominently in contemporary descriptions of
many psychiatric disorders, and is also a key element in the
clinical risk assessment of violence. Thoroughly examining the
nature, assessment, and treatment of impulsive conduct, this
up-to-date volume brings together contributions from prominent
researchers and clinicians in both mental health and correctional
settings. Chapters illuminate our current understanding of
impulsive behavior from conceptual, legal, and biological
perspectives, and address the challenges of describing and
measuring it. Special features include several invaluable 20-item
checklists designed to aid in risk evaluation with mentally
disordered persons, potentially suicidal correctional inmates,
spousal assaulters, and sex offenders. Impulsivity provides a
comprehensive overview of the current state of the research and
delineates a broad, clinically pertinent agenda for future
study.
Scattered throughout their coastal homelands, the remains of impressive artworks produced by the Moche of northern Peru survive. These works include ceremonial centers extensively decorated with murals, as well as elaborate and sophisticated ceramic vessels, textiles, and metalwork, that serve to visually represent an ancient American culture that developed a complex, systematized pictorial code used to communicate narratives, sets of ideas, and ideological constructs. In this study, Margaret Jackson analyzes Moche ceremonial architecture and ceramics to propose the workings of a widely understood visual language. Using an interdisciplinary approach that incorporates archaeology and linguistics with art history and studies of visual culture, Jackson looks at the symbolism of Moche art as a form of communication, the social mechanisms that produced it, and how it served to maintain the Moche social fabric.
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