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A guide to current practices in hazardous waste incineration,
including commercially available technologies, waste
characterization, pollution control, facility design and operation.
Cold War Negritude is the first book-length study of francophone
Caribbean literature to foreground the political context of the
global Cold War. It focuses on three canonical francophone
Caribbean writers—René Depestre, Aimé Césaire, and
Jacques-Stephen Alexis—whose literary careers and political
alignments spanned all three “worlds” of the 1950s Cold War
order. As black Caribbean authors who wrote in French, who
participated directly in the global communist movement, and whose
engagements with Marxist thought and practice were mediated by
their colonial relationship to France, these writers expressed
unique insight into this bipolar system as it was taking shape. The
book shows how, over the course of the 1950s, French Caribbean
Marxist authors re-evaluated the literary aesthetics of Negritude
and sought to develop alternatives that would be adequate to the
radically changed world system of the Cold War. Through close
readings of literary, theoretical, and political texts by Depestre,
Césaire, and Alexis, I show that this formal shift reflected a
strikingly changed understanding of what it meant to write engaged
literature in the new, bipolar world order. Debates about literary
aesthetics became the proxy battlefield on which Antillean writers
promoted and fought for their different visions of an emancipated
Caribbean modernity. Consequent to their complicated Cold War
alignments, these Antillean authors developed original and
unorthodox Marxist literary aesthetics that syncretized an array of
socialist literary tendencies from around the globe.
The first comprehensive handbook on the seeds of trees and shrubs
produced by the USDA Forest Service was USDA Misc. Pub. 654,
Woody-Plant Seed Manual. The manuscript was ready for publication
in 1941, but World War II delayed publication until 1948. The boom
in tree planting in the 1950s and 1960s created a large demand for
seeds and exposed the gaps in our knowledge concerning production
and quality of seeds of woody plants in general. The 1974 Handbook
proved to be very popular both in this country and abroad, leading
to five printings and translations in several other languages. More
than a quarter-century after its publication, however, numerous
advances in tree seed technology have dictated that a new revision
is needed; the result is the current volume. Part I contains
information on how to get seeds and raise seedlings.
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