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This volume provides in-depth coverage of such topics as
multi-reservoir system operation theory and practice, management of
aquifer systems connected to streams using semi-analytical models,
one-dimensional model of water quality and aquatic
ecosystem-ecotoxicology in river systems, environmental and health
impacts of hydraulic fracturing and shale gas, bioaugmentation for
water resources protection, wastewater renovation by flotation for
water pollution control, determination of receiving water's
reaeration coefficient in the presence of salinity for water
quality management, sensitivity analysis for stream water quality
management, river ice process, and computer-aided mathematical
modeling of water properties. This critical volume will serve as a
valuable reference work for advanced undergraduate and graduate
students, designers of water resources systems, and scientists and
researchers. The goals of the Handbook of Environmental Engineering
series are: (1) to cover entire environmental fields, including air
and noise pollution control, solid waste processing and resource
recovery, physicochemical treatment processes, biological treatment
processes, biotechnology, biosolids management, flotation
technology, membrane technology, desalination technology, water
resources, natural control processes, radioactive waste disposal,
hazardous waste management, and thermal pollution control; and (2)
to employ a multimedia approach to environmental conservation and
protection since air, water, soil and energy are all interrelated.
This volume provides in-depth coverage of such topics as
multi-reservoir system operation theory and practice, management of
aquifer systems connected to streams using semi-analytical models,
one-dimensional model of water quality and aquatic
ecosystem-ecotoxicology in river systems, environmental and health
impacts of hydraulic fracturing and shale gas, bioaugmentation for
water resources protection, wastewater renovation by flotation for
water pollution control, determination of receiving water's
reaeration coefficient in the presence of salinity for water
quality management, sensitivity analysis for stream water quality
management, river ice process, and computer-aided mathematical
modeling of water properties. This critical volume will serve as a
valuable reference work for advanced undergraduate and graduate
students, designers of water resources systems, and scientists and
researchers. The goals of the Handbook of Environmental Engineering
series are: (1) to cover entire environmental fields, including air
and noise pollution control, solid waste processing and resource
recovery, physicochemical treatment processes, biological treatment
processes, biotechnology, biosolids management, flotation
technology, membrane technology, desalination technology, water
resources, natural control processes, radioactive waste disposal,
hazardous waste management, and thermal pollution control; and (2)
to employ a multimedia approach to environmental conservation and
protection since air, water, soil and energy are all interrelated.
Gradual change has been a hallmark of the Chinese reform
experience, and China's success in its sequential approach makes it
unique among the former command economies. Since 1979, with the
inception of the continuing era of reform, the Chinese economy has
flourished. Growth has averaged nine percent a year, and China is
now a trillion dollar economy. China has become a major trading
power, and the predominant target among developing countries for
foreign direct investment. For all that, China remains poor, and
the reform process unfinished. This book takes its defining theme
from Deng Xiaopeng's famous metaphor for gradual reform: feeling
the stones to cross the river. How far has China progressed in
fording the river? The experts who have contributed to this volume
tackle many aspects of that question, assessing Chinese progress in
policy reform, priorities for further reform and the research still
needed to inform policymakers' decisions.
Yang Mu is a towering figure in modern Chinese poetry. His poetic
voice is subtle and lyrical, and his work is rich with precise
images and crystalline thoughts invoking temporality and
remembrance. A bold innovator and superb craftsman, he elegantly
combines cosmopolitan experimentation with poetic forms and an
allusive reverence for classical Chinese poetry while remaining
rooted in his native Taiwan and its colonial history. Hawk of the
Mind is a comprehensive collection of Yang Mu's poetry that
presents crucial works from the many stages of his long creative
career, rendered into English by a team of distinguished
translators. It conveys the complexity and beauty of Yang Mu's work
in a stately and lucid English poetic register that displays his
ability to range from meditative to playful and colloquial to
archaic. The volume includes an editor's introduction and
definitive commentary that offer insights into the poet's major
themes and motifs, explaining how he draws on deep engagement with
Chinese and Western literary traditions, history, and art as well
as mythology, philosophy, and music and a profound love for the
natural world to create a nuanced and multifaceted artistic
universe. It also contains translations of prefaces and afterwords
written by Yang Mu for collections of his poetry. Hawk of the Mind
demonstrates the breadth and depth of Yang Mu's oeuvre,
illustrating the distinctive style and affective power of a great
poet.
Yang Mu, a pivotal figure in the development of modern Chinese
literature, is one of the most widely read living poets of the
world's largest literary audience: Chinese-speaking people.
Providing a selection of poems from more than three decades of
work, this book offers over one hundred translations that capture
the poet's haunting lyricism. Drawing on avant-garde traditions of
Europe and the United States as well as on the traditions of
classical Chinese poetry and prose, his work explores intense
sensuality and the erotic, the anguish of war, exile, the colonial
experience, and conflicting views of national and cultural
identity. Born Wang Ching-hsien in Taiwan in 1940, Yang Mu lived in
a rich cultural and linguistic environment, learning Taiwanese, a
Hua-lien tribal dialect, Japanese, Mandarin, and English. When he
arrived in the United States in 1964, the young poet added Old
English, ancient Greek, Latin, and German to his repertoire. Yang
Mu's poetry fully reflects this dazzling range and diversity. This
volume also includes an essay placing the poet's work in the
context of twentieth-century literary movements and in the long
tradition of Chinese poetry.
Two contemporary poets from Taiwan, Yang Mu (pen name for Wang
Ching-hsien, b. 1940) and Lo Ch'ing (pen name for Lo Ch'ing-che, b.
1948), are represented in this bilingual edition of Chinese poetry
ranging from the romantic to the postmodern. Both poets were
involved in the selection of poems for this volume, the first
edition in any language of their selected work. Their backgrounds,
literary styles, and professional lifes are profiled and compared
by translator Joseph R. Allen in critical essays that show how Yang
and Lo represent basic directions in modern Chinese poetics and how
they have contributed to the definition of modernism and
postmodernism in China. The book's organization reflects each
poet's method of composition. Yang's poems are chronologically
arrangd, as his poetry tends to describe a narrative line that
closely parallels his own biography. Lo's poems, which explore a
world of concept and metaphor, are grouped by theme. Although each
poet has a range of poetic voices, Yang's work can be considered
the peak of high modernism in Chinese poetry, while Lo's more
problematic work suggests the direction of new explorations in the
art. In this way the two poets are mutually illuminating. Each
group of poems is prefaced by an "illustration" that draws from
another side of the poet's intellectual life. For Yang, who is a
professor of comparative literature at the University of
Washington, these are excerpts from his academic work (written
under the name C.H. Wang) in English. The poems by Lo, a well-known
painter living in Taiwan, are illustrated by five of his own ink
paintings.
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