Muriel Cooper

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

Muriel Cooper The MIT Press Fall 2017 The MIT Press DEAR FRIENDS AND READERS, CONTENTS Among the many stellar books on our Fall 2017 list, which spans a wide Tr a d e 1-79 expanse of felds, I would especially like to draw your attention to our growing focus on the ever-important area of higher education and lifelong Academic Trade 80-93 learning. Our list this season features Mitchel Resnick’s Lifelong Kindergarten, Professional 94-123 Joseph Aoun’s Robot-Proof Education, John Palfrey’s Safe Spaces, Brave Spaces, and Stephen Kosslyn’s Minerva and the Future of Higher Education. Paperback Reprints 124-142 This list will continue to grow at the MIT Press under the auspices of Susan Buckley, our newly appointed editor for education and learning. Journals 143-146 Her books will help us understand the science of how we learn and how new technologies and media afect the education system and the potential The Digital MIT Press 147 for learning at all ages. Order Information 149-152 This season we also celebrate ffty years since Muriel Cooper—the Press’s frst design director and the creator of the famous MIT Press Index 153-155 colophon—joined the Press, with the publication of David Reinfurt and Robert Wiesenberger’s Muriel Cooper and the facsimile edition of the large Paperback Highlights 156-157 format Cooper-design Learning from Las Vegas. I invite you to explore these and other gems herein. Recent Highlights 158-159 Gift Books 160-inside back cover Enjoy! Amy Brand DISTRIBUTED BY THE MIT PRESS Afterall Books 50-51 Goldsmiths Press 52 Semiotext(e) 53-58 Zone Books 59-63 Strange Attractor Press 64-79 front cover: From the cover design for the MIT Press book Models for the Perception of Speech and Visual Form edited by Weiant Wathen-Dunn. Courtesy of Morton R. Godine Library, Archive, Massachusetts College of Art and Design. Copyright MIT. From Muriel Cooper by David Reinfurt and Robert Wiesenberger. inside front cover: Mechanical artwork for the MIT Press colophon, 1962–3. Muriel R. Cooper Collection. Courtesy of Morton R. Godine Library, Archive, Massachusetts College of Art and Design. Copyright MIT and Estate of Muriel Cooper. From Muriel Cooper by David Reinfurt and Robert Wiesenberger. TRADE history | technology The Chinese Typewriter A History Thomas S. Mullaney Chinese writing is character based, the one major world script that is neither alphabetic nor syllabic. Through the years, the Chinese written language encountered presumed alphabetic universalism in the form of Morse Code, Braille, stenography, Linotype, punch cards, word processing, and other systems developed with the Latin alphabet in mind. This book is about those encounters—in particular thousands of Chinese characters versus the typewriter and its QWERTY keyboard. Thomas Mullaney describes a fascinating series of experiments, prototypes, failures, and suc- cesses in the century-long quest for a workable Chinese typewriter. The earliest Chinese typewriters, Mullaney tells us, were fgments of popular imagination, sensational accounts of twelve-foot keyboards with , keys. ne of the frst Chinese typewriters actually constructed was invented by a Christian missionary, who organized characters by common usage (but promoted the less-common characters for “Jesus” to the common usage level). Later came typewriters manufactured for use in Chinese oces, and typewriting schools that turned out trained “typewriter girls” and “typewriter boys.” Still later was the “Double Pigeon” typewriter produced by the Shanghai Calculator and Typewriter Factory, the typewriter of choice under Mao. Clerks and secretaries in this era experimented with alternative ways of organizing characters on their tray beds, inventing an input method that was the frst instance of How Chinese characters “predictive text.” triumphed over the QWERTY Today, after more than a century of resistance against the alphabetic, keyboard and laid the not only have Chinese characters prevailed, they form the linguistic foundation for China’s substrate of the vibrant world of Chinese information technology. The information technology Chinese Typewriter, not just an “object history” but grappling with broad successes today. questions of technological change and global communication, shows how this happened. September 6 x 9, 480 pp. Thomas S. Mullaney is Associate Professor of History at Stanford University 86 illus. and the author of Coming to Terms with the Nation: Ethnic Classification in $34.95T/£27.95 cloth Modern China. 978-0-262-03636-8 MITPRESS.MIT.EDU | FALL 2017 1 TRADE politics | education Safe Spaces, Brave Spaces Diversity and Free Expression in Education John Palfrey foreword by Alberto Ibarguen Safe spaces, trigger warnings, microagressions, the un-invitation of speakers, demands to rename campus landmarks—debate over these issues began in lecture halls and on college quads but ended up on op-ed pages in the New York Times and the Wall Street Journal, on cable news, and on social media. Some of these critiques had merit, but others took a series of cheap shots at “crybullies” who needed to be coddled and protected from the real world. Few questioned the assumption that col- leges must choose between free expression and diversity. In Safe Spaces, Brave Spaces, John Palfrey argues that the essential democratic values of diversity and free expression can, and should, coexist on campus. Palfrey, currently Head of School at Phillips Academy, Andover, and formerly Professor and Vice Dean at Harvard Law School, writes that free expression and diversity are more compatible than opposed. Free expression can serve everyone—even if it has at times been dominated by white, male, Christian, heterosexual, able-bodied citizens. Diversity is about self-expression, learning from one another, and working together across diferences it can encompass academic freedom without condon- ing hate speech. Palfrey proposes an innovative way to support both diversity and How the essential democratic free expression on campus: creating safe spaces and brave spaces. In safe values of diversity and spaces, students can explore ideas and express themselves without feeling free expression can coexist marginalized. In brave spaces—classrooms, lecture halls, public forums— on campus. the search for knowledge is paramount, even if some discussions may make certain students uncomfortable. The strength of our democracy, says October Palfrey, depends on a commitment to upholding both diversity and free 5 3/8 x 8, 184 pp. 1 illus. expression, especially when it is hardest to do so. $19.95T/£14.95 cloth John Palfrey is Head of School at Phillips Academy, Andover, coauthor of Born 978-0-262-03714-3 Digital: How Children Grow Up in a Digital Age, and author of the MIT Press Essential Knowledge volume Intellectual Property Strategy. 2 FALL 2017 | MITPRESS.MIT.EDU TRADE history | women’s studies A Brief History of Feminism Patu \ Antje Schrupp translated by Sophie Lewis The history of feminism? The right to vote, Susan B. Anthony, Gloria Steinem, white pantsuits? Oh, but there’s so much more. And we need to know about it, especially now. In pithy text and pithier comics, A Brief History of Feminism engages us, educates us, makes us laugh, and makes us angry. It begins with antiquity and the early days of Judeo-Christianity. (Mary Magdalene questions the maleness of Jesus’s inner circle: “People will end up getting the notion you don’t want women to be priests.” Jesus: “Really, Mary, do you always have to be so negative?”) It continues through the Middle Ages, the Early Modern period, and the Enlight- enment (“Liberty, equality, fraternity!” “But fraternity means brother- hood!”). It covers the beginnings of an organized women’s movement in the nineteenth century, second-wave Feminism, queer feminism, and third-wave Feminism. long the way, we learn about important f gures lympe de ouges, author of the “Declaration of the Rights of Woman and the Female Citien guillotined by Robespierre lora Tristan, who linked the op- pression of women and the oppression of the proletariat before Marx and Engels set pen to paper and the poet udre orde, who pointed to the racial obliviousness of mainstream feminism in the 1970s and 1980s. We learn about bourgeois and working-class issues, and the angry racism of some American feminists when black men got the vote before women An engaging illustrated did. We see God as a long-bearded old man emerging from a cloud (and history of feminism from once, as a woman with her hair in curlers). And we learn the story so far antiquity through third- of a history that is still being written. wave feminism, featuring Sappho, Mary Magdalene, Patu is an artist and cofounder of the artist collective radical jetset, creators of comic books, murals, and installations. Antje Schrupp is a journalist and Mary Wollstonecraft, political scientist living in Frankfurt am Main. Sojourner Truth, Simone de Beauvoir, and many others. September 6 x 9, 88 pp. 222 illus. $14.95T/£12.95 cloth 978-0-262-03711-2 MITPRESS.MIT.EDU | FALL 2017 3 TRADE science | math The Beauty of Numbers in Nature Mathematical Patterns and Principles in the Natural World Ian Stewart rom a ebra’s stripes to a spider’s web, from sand dunes to snowakes, nature is full of patterns underlaid by mathematical principles. In The Beauty of Numbers in Nature, Ian Stewart shows how life forms from the principles of mathematics. Each chapter in The Beauty of Numbers in Nature explores a diferent kind of patterning system and its mathematical underpinnings. In doing do, the book also uncovers some universal pat- terns—both in nature and made by humans—from the basic geometry of ancient Greece to the complexities of fractals. Stewart draws on a wide range of sources to examine the mathemat- ics of patterns: the Pythagoreans’ obsession with numbers as the philo- sophical basis of the universe a great mathematician who wondered about how a violin makes music a clerk in a patent oce who realied that space and time can get mixed together a maverick mathematician who questioned why nature spurns such regular geometric shapes as spheres and cylinders in favor of jagged lightning bolts, asymmetrically branching trees, and the uneven terrain of mountainsides.
Recommended publications
  • Hidden Hydrology COIL’S ‘Lost Rivers’ Sessions 1995-1996
    Hidden Hydrology COIL’s ‘Lost Rivers’ Sessions 1995-1996 {Fan Curated EP} COIL - The ‘Lost Rivers’ Sessions 1995-1996 {Fan Curated EP} Lost Rivers of London Succour Version [DAT Master]. Untitled Instrumental #6 [DAT #30] 5 takes from the BLD Sessions 1995-1996. London’s Lost Rivers [Take #2 - vocals] Rough vocal track w. minimal backing mix. Lost Rivers of London [Take #1] Early version with vocals. Crackanthorpe; Sunrise Reading from Vignettes by Phil Barrington. London’s Lost Rivers [Take #1] Initial studio version with abrupt ending. [Cover Version] By The Psychogeographical Commission. Hidden Hydrology COIL's 'Lost Rivers' Studio Sessions COIL's "Lost Rivers" sessions were recorded during the Winter period of December 1995- February 1996 at COIL's own "Slut's Hole" studio in London. The day-long sessions were part of what ultimately became the "A Thousand Lights In A Darkened Room" album (at least as far as the vinyl pressing of that album went), though were apparently very rushed recordings (Jhonn later claimed that the full vocal version was written and recorded in one day to meet the “Succour” compilation deadline - Jhonn’s wraparound vocals were not redone for the BLD track). Around this winter time Jhonn Balance received a fax from David Tibet containing evocative passages from the Crackanthorpe "Vignettes" journal, originally published 100 years earlier (1896). Jhonn loved the sections he read and swiftly used passages as lyrics for the recording sessions to meet the Succour deadline (lifting text from the ‘On Chelsea Embankment’ and “In Richmond Park” sections of the small book). At the very same time as recording this track, the official (and long-awaited) 2nd Edition of the Nicholas Barton book called "The Lost Rivers of London" appeared in the bookshops of the city.
    [Show full text]
  • Australian SF News 28
    NUMBER 28 registered by AUSTRALIA post #vbg2791 95C Volume 4 Number 2 March 1982 COW & counts PUBLISH 3 H£W ttOVttS CORY § COLLINS have published three new novels in their VOID series. RYN by Jack Wodhams, LANCES OF NENGESDUL by Keith Taylor and SAPPHIRE IN THIS ISSUE: ROAD by Wynne Whiteford. The recommended retail price on each is $4.95 Distribution is again a dilemna for them and a^ter problems with some DITMAR AND NEBULA AWARD NOMINATIONS, FRANK HERBERT of the larger paperback distributors, it seems likely that these titles TO WRITE FIFTH DUNE BOOK, ROBERT SILVERBERG TO DO will be handled by ALLBOOKS. Carey Handfield has just opened an office in Melbourne for ALLBOOKS and will of course be handling all their THIRD MAJIPOOR BOOK, "FRIDAY" - A NEW ROBERT agencies along with NORSTRILIA PRESS publications. HEINLEIN NOVEL DUE OUT IN JUNE, AN APPRECIATION OF TSCHA1CON GOH JACK VANCE BY A.BERTRAM CHANDLER, GEORGE TURNER INTERVIEWED, Philip K. Dick Dies BUG JACK BARRON TO BE FILMED, PLUS MORE NEWS, REVIEWS, LISTS AND LETTERS. February 18th; he developed pneumonia and a collapsed lung, and had a second stroke on February 24th, which put him into a A. BERTRAM CHANDLER deep coma and he was placed on a respir­ COMPLETES NEW NOVEL ator. There was no brain activity and doctors finally turned off the life A.BERTRAM CHANDLER has completed his support system. alternative Australian history novel, titled KELLY COUNTRY. It is in the hands He had a tremendous influence on the sf of his agents and publishers. GRIMES field, with a cult following in and out of AND THE ODD GODS is a short sold to sf fandom, but with the making of the Cory and Collins and IASFM in the U.S.A.
    [Show full text]
  • Torino Teatro Alfieri Martedì 22.IX.09 Ore 22 Mercoledì 23.IX.09 Ore 22 Il
    Torino Il canto del vuoto tagliente Teatro Alfieri Martedì 22.IX.09 Current 93 manifests as C93 ore 22 James Blackshaw Mercoledì 23.IX.09 Nurse With Wound ore 22 & Blind Cave Salamander Larsen & z’ev Progetto Grafico Studio Cerri & Associati Il canto del vuoto tagliente è stato ideato dal di cui è l’iniziativa inaugurale Il Festival proseguirà con Storie di altri mondi (27 settembre/2 ottobre) e Teatri del tempo presente (1/4 ottobre) In collaborazione con Torino Spiritualità Videoimpaginazione e stampa • la fotocomposizione - Torino martedì 22 settembre ore 22 Il canto del vuoto tagliente Atto primo Current 93 manifests as C93 James Blackshaw Current 93, la storica band di Hallucinatory Patripassianist Song, in attività sin dal 1982 guidata da David Tibet, apparirà in diverse forme e con diverse line up per tutto il 2009 per celebrare il suo nuovo album Aleph At Hallucinatory Mountain. Alla manifestazione di Torino, unica data italiana, prendono parte: Alex Neilson, batteria Andrew Liles, electronics Baby Dee, pianoforte, tastiere David Tibet, voce, chitarra Keith Wood, chitarra James Blackshaw, chitarra James Blackshaw, chitarrista dedito a ipnotiche composizioni per dodici corde e pianoforte, aprirà la serata con un set solista per presentare il suo nuovo album The Glass Bead Gam, inciso per l’etichetta di Michael Gira Young God Records. www.durtro.com www.myspace.com/current93 www.myspace.com/jamesblackshaw Se desiderate commentare questo concerto, potete farlo sul sito www.sistemamusica.it o su blog.mitosettembremusica.it mercoledì
    [Show full text]
  • Noumenon 41 Outside the Theatre
    EDITORIAL “Yes, Brian Thurogood from Waiheke here. You were going to send out that information two weeks ago.” Noumenon is published 10 times per year, hopefully "Yes, Brian. I'm sorry but we've had a terrible at 5-weekly intervals. week. In fact, a terrible fortnight — the worst I've Subscriptions are: ever had. I think. Although the air strike has been . S5.7S/10 issu es NZ [incl. postage] over for two weeks we're still drastically affected S12.25/10 issues | Surface ] S7.00/I0 issues by ” "Oh. I'm sorry to hear that.” S13.25/10 issues Britain [Airmail] . "Well, we've had to borrow equipment hack, . S7.00/I0 issues [Surface] . even go to other suppliers — honestly, it's been Retail |New Zealand] 7 5c/copy diabolical.” Trade Discount . Less ‘6 "In a way it's good to hear we're not the only ones with weeks like that.” Noum mon Is edited end published by: "No, you're not — not by a long shot.” Brian Thurogood “Okay, we'll hear from you soon.” 40 Korora Road, Oneroa "Yes, I'll finish it tonight, or at the latest, to Waiheke Island, HaurakiGulf morrow morning.” NEW ZEALAND Phone WH 8502 Art Consultant: Colin Wlbon Hello again. But let me tell you the good news. Typesetting & Assistance: Kath Alber Next issue, gods and demons willing, will see the Subscription cheques, postal notes or Bank drafts should be introduction of the marvelous made payable to Noumenon and sent to the above address. High Tech, Silicon Chip, Laser Generated We welcome unsolicited contributions.
    [Show full text]
  • Jews and Germans in Eastern Europe New Perspectives on Modern Jewish History
    Jews and Germans in Eastern Europe New Perspectives on Modern Jewish History Edited by Cornelia Wilhelm Volume 8 Jews and Germans in Eastern Europe Shared and Comparative Histories Edited by Tobias Grill An electronic version of this book is freely available, thanks to the support of libra- ries working with Knowledge Unlatched. KU is a collaborative initiative designed to make high quality books Open Access. More information about the initiative can be found at www.knowledgeunlatched.org ISBN 978-3-11-048937-8 e-ISBN (PDF) 978-3-11-049248-4 e-ISBN (EPUB) 978-3-11-048977-4 This work is licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial NoDerivatives 4.0 License. For details go to http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/. Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Names: Grill, Tobias. Title: Jews and Germans in Eastern Europe : shared and comparative histories / edited by/herausgegeben von Tobias Grill. Description: [Berlin] : De Gruyter, [2018] | Series: New perspectives on modern Jewish history ; Band/Volume 8 | Includes bibliographical references and index. Identifiers: LCCN 2018019752 (print) | LCCN 2018019939 (ebook) | ISBN 9783110492484 (electronic Portable Document Format (pdf)) | ISBN 9783110489378 (hardback) | ISBN 9783110489774 (e-book epub) | ISBN 9783110492484 (e-book pdf) Subjects: LCSH: Jews--Europe, Eastern--History. | Germans--Europe, Eastern--History. | Yiddish language--Europe, Eastern--History. | Europe, Eastern--Ethnic relations. | BISAC: HISTORY / Jewish. | HISTORY / Europe / Eastern. Classification: LCC DS135.E82 (ebook) | LCC DS135.E82 J495 2018 (print) | DDC 947/.000431--dc23 LC record available at https://lccn.loc.gov/2018019752 Bibliographic information published by the Deutsche Nationalbibliothek The Deutsche Nationalbibliothek lists this publication in the Deutsche Nationalbibliografie; detailed bibliographic data are available in the Internet at http://dnb.dnb.de.
    [Show full text]
  • DISINTEGRATION Loop 1.1
    SVILOVA | WILLIAM BASINSKI DISINTEGRATION LOOP 1.1 WILLIAM BASINSKI JUNE 18–JULY 31, 2014 www.svilova.org 1 SVILOVA | WILLIAM BASINSKI SCALE BE THY KING: THE BLACK Mirror OF William Basinski By David Keenan 1. Scalle Bee Thie Kynge. There is a magical idea, rarely articulated, that imagination is the world-creating matrix of desire, in other words that imagination is what translates a sensation into a thought. Disintegration Loops, still the central, emblematic work of the artist and composer William Basinski, conflates the biological with the constructed, the historical with the personal, by a creative act of imagination that would attempt to mimic the function of memory via accidental processes of auto-forgetting while connecting it with historical trauma –the 9/11 attacks on the Twin Towers as a head wound – and romantic portraiture, through the back cover recreation of Henry Wallis’s 1856 painting, The Death Of Chatterton, with Basinski posed as the dead 18th Century English poet, who poisoned himself in 1770, aged 17. Thomas Chatterton’s reputation as a forger of mystical poetry is of note here. From the age of 12 onwards he produced a run of strange, visionary verse that he claimed was the work of a 15th century monk of his own invention, Thomas Rowley. Indeed, a particular adjective, “Rowliean”, has been coined to describe the works of this historical figment, this shade birthed of an intoxicated imagination. Rowley’s verse is difficult, its language being largely derived from Chatterton’s study of the English philologist John Kersey’s Dictionarium Anglo-Britannicum, “comprehending a brief explication of all sorts of difficult words”.
    [Show full text]
  • Ten Strategies of a World-Class Cybersecurity Operations Center Conveys MITRE’S Expertise on Accumulated Expertise on Enterprise-Grade Computer Network Defense
    Bleed rule--remove from file Bleed rule--remove from file MITRE’s accumulated Ten Strategies of a World-Class Cybersecurity Operations Center conveys MITRE’s expertise on accumulated expertise on enterprise-grade computer network defense. It covers ten key qualities enterprise- grade of leading Cybersecurity Operations Centers (CSOCs), ranging from their structure and organization, computer MITRE network to processes that best enable effective and efficient operations, to approaches that extract maximum defense Ten Strategies of a World-Class value from CSOC technology investments. This book offers perspective and context for key decision Cybersecurity Operations Center points in structuring a CSOC and shows how to: • Find the right size and structure for the CSOC team Cybersecurity Operations Center a World-Class of Strategies Ten The MITRE Corporation is • Achieve effective placement within a larger organization that a not-for-profit organization enables CSOC operations that operates federally funded • Attract, retain, and grow the right staff and skills research and development • Prepare the CSOC team, technologies, and processes for agile, centers (FFRDCs). FFRDCs threat-based response are unique organizations that • Architect for large-scale data collection and analysis with a assist the U.S. government with limited budget scientific research and analysis, • Prioritize sensor placement and data feed choices across development and acquisition, enteprise systems, enclaves, networks, and perimeters and systems engineering and integration. We’re proud to have If you manage, work in, or are standing up a CSOC, this book is for you. served the public interest for It is also available on MITRE’s website, www.mitre.org. more than 50 years.
    [Show full text]
  • Graphics Incognito
    45 amateur, trendy, and of-the-moment. The irony, What We Do Is Secret the subject of spirited disagreement and post-hoc of course, being that over the subsequent two speculation both by budding hardcore punks decades punk and graffiti (or, more precisely, One place to begin to consider the kind of and veteran scenesters over the past twenty-five GRAPHICS hip-hop) have proven to be two of the most crossing I am talking about is with the debut years. According to most accounts, ‘GI’ stands productive domains not only for graphic design, (and only) album by the legendary Los Angeles for ‘Germs Incognito’ and was not originally INCOGNITO but for popular culture at large. Meanwhile, punk band the Germs, titled simply ����.5 intended to be the title of the album. By the time Rand’s example remains a source of inspiration The Germs had formed in 1977 when teenage the songs were recorded the Germs had been by Mark Owens to scores of art directors and graphic designers friends Paul Beahm and George Ruthen began banned from most LA clubsclubs andand hadhad resortedresorted to weaned on breakbeats and powerchords. writing songs in the style of their idols David booking shows under the initials GI. Presumably And while I suppose it might be possible to see Bowie and Iggy Pop. After the broadcast of a in order to avoid confusion, the band had wanted My interest has always been in restating Rand’s use of techniques like handwriting, ripped London performance by The Clash and The Sex the self-titled LP to read ‘GERMS (GI)’, as if it the validity of those ideas which, by and paper, and collage as sharing certain formal Pistols on local television a handful of Los Angeles were one word.
    [Show full text]
  • Download Publication
    Arts Council OF GREAT BRITAI N Patronage and Responsibility Thirty=fourth annual report and accounts 1978/79 ARTS COUNCIL OF GREAT BRITAIN REFERENCE ONLY DO NOT REMOVE fROwI THE LIBRARY Thirty-fourth Annual Report and Accounts 1979 ISSN 0066-813 3 Published by the Arts Council of Great Britai n 105 Piccadilly, London W 1V OAU Designed by Duncan Firt h Printed by Watmoughs Limited, Idle, Bradford ; and London Cover pictures : Dave Atkins (the Foreman) and Liz Robertson (Eliza) in the Leicester Haymarket production ofMy Fair Lady, produced by Cameron Mackintosh with special funds from Arts Council Touring (photo : Donald Cooper), and Ian McKellen (Prozorov) and Susan Trac y (Natalya) in the Royal Shakespeare Company's small- scale tour of The Three Sisters . Contents 4 Chairman's Introductio n 5 Secretary-General's Report 12 Regional Developmen t 13 Drama 16 Music and Dance 20 Visual Arts 24 Literature 25 Touring 27 Festivals 27 Arts Centres 28 Community Art s 29 Performance Art 29 Ethnic Arts 30 Marketing 30 Housing the Arts 31 Training 31 Education 32 Research and Informatio n 33 Press Office 33 Publications 34 Scotland 36 Wales 38 Membership of Council and Staff 39 Council, Committees and Panels 47 Annual Accounts , Awards, Funds and Exhibitions The objects for which the Arts Council of Great Britain is established by Royal Charter are : 1 To develop and improve the knowledge , understanding and practice of the arts ; 2 To increase the accessibility of the arts to the public throughout Great Britain ; and 3 To co-operate with government departments, local authorities and other bodies to achieve these objects .
    [Show full text]
  • Starlog Magazine
    THE MATRIX SCIENCE FICTION FILMS*TV*VIDEO Indiana Carrie-Anne 4 Jones' wild iss & the death JANUARY #318 r women * of Trinity Exploit terrain to gain tactical advantages. 'Welcome to Middle-earth* The journey begins this fall. OFFICIAL GAME BASED OS ''HE I.l'l't'.RAKY WORKS Of J.R.R. 'I'OI.KIKN www.lordoftherings.com * f> Sunita ft* NUMBER 318 • JANUARY 2004 THE SCIENCE FICTION UNIVERSE ^^^^ INSIDEiRicinE THISti 111* ISSUEicri ir 23 NEIL CAIMAN'S DREAMS The fantasist weaves new tales of endless nights 28 RICHARD DONNER SPEAKS i v iu tuuay jfck--- 32 FLIGHT OF THE FIREFLY Creator is \ 1 *-^J^ Joss Whedon glad to see his saga out on DVD 36 INDY'S WOMEN L/UUUy ICLdll IMC dLLIUII 40 GALACTICA 2.0 Ron Moore defends his plans for the brand-new Battlestar 46 THE WARRIOR KING Heroic Viggo Mortensen fights to save Middle-Earth 50 FRODO LIVES Atop Mount Doom, Elijah Wood faces a final test 54 OF GOOD FELLOWSHIP Merry turns grim as Dominic Monaghan joins the Riders 58 THAT SEXY CYLON! Tricia Heifer is the model of mocmodern mini-series menace 62 LANDniun OFAC THETUE BEARDEAD Disney's new animated film is a Native-American fantasy 66 BEING & ELFISHNESS Launch into space As a young man, Will Ferrell warfare with the was raised by Elves—no, SCI Fl Channel's new really Battlestar Galactica (see page 40 & 58). 71 KEYMAKER UNLOCKED! Does Randall Duk Kim hold the key to the Matrix mysteries? 74 78 PAINTING CYBERWORLDS Production designer Paterson STARLOC: The Science Fiction Universe is published monthly by STARLOG GROUP, INC., Owen 475 Park Avenue South, New York, NY 10016.
    [Show full text]
  • Vibual BAANCE the Tightrope of Computer Generated Layout
    ViBUAL BAANCE The Tightrope of Computer Generated Layout by Xiaoyang Yang Bachelor of Science in Physics, July 1983 Peking University, Beijing, China Master of Science in Physics, August 1991 Doctor of Philosophy in Physics, August 1993 Michigan Technological University, Houghton, Michigan Submitted to the Program in Media Arts and Sciences School of Architecture and Planning In Partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Media Arts and Sciences at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology September 1995 Copyright 1995 MIT All Rights Reserved Author, Program in Media Alts and Sciences August 11, 1995 Certified by William J. Mitchell Dean, School of Architecture and Planning Massachusetts Inctitutp nf TPhnnlna Thesis Supervis Accepted by Stephen A. Benton Chair, Departmental Committee on Graduate Students Program in Media Arts and Sciences sAGsgsysvIN rU OF TECHNOLOGY OCT 2 6 1995 tch LIBRARIES VISUAL BALANCE The Tightrope of Computer Generated Layout by Xiaoyang Yang Submitted to the Program in Media Arts and Sciences School of Architecture and Planning on August 11, 1995 In Partial fulfillment of requirements for the degree of Master of Science in Media Arts and Sciences Like skating or walking the Abstract tightrope, the art of layout is an art of balance. This thesis work proposes an theoretical framework for generative A. TOLMER MISE EN PAGE, THE THEORY AND design systems based on the principle of visual balance in graphic PRACTICE OF LAYOUT 1920 PARIS design. It discusses a new metaphor for both the novice and professional designers to explores graphic layout variations, a new approach to machine understanding of visual balance and a new way to support automated layout of computer-based documents.
    [Show full text]
  • Qubit 16 Cubit
    University of South Florida Scholar Commons Digital Collection - Science Fiction & Fantasy Digital Collection - Science Fiction & Fantasy Publications 5-1-2006 Qubit 16 Cubit Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/scifistud_pub Part of the Fiction Commons Scholar Commons Citation Cubit, "Qubit 16 " (2006). Digital Collection - Science Fiction & Fantasy Publications. Paper 16. http://scholarcommons.usf.edu/scifistud_pub/16 This Journal is brought to you for free and open access by the Digital Collection - Science Fiction & Fantasy at Scholar Commons. It has been accepted for inclusion in Digital Collection - Science Fiction & Fantasy Publications by an authorized administrator of Scholar Commons. For more information, please contact [email protected]. De frecuencia mensual y totalmente gratis 0. Índice: 1. Stanislaw Lem, el poeta del Cosmos. 2. Lem, Dick: Correspondencias. Pablo contursi 3. ¿Existe verdaderamente Mister Smith? Stanislaw Lem 4. Entrevista con Stanislaw Lem. David torres 5. Expedición primera A, o el Electrobardo de Trurl. Stanislaw Lem 6. El auténtico sentido de la maravilla: Solaris, de Lem. Javier Negrete. 7. Salvemos al espacio Stanislaw Lem 8. Filmografía de Stanislaw Lem. 9. Historia del cine ciberpunk. (Capítulo 14) Raúl Aguiar Stanislaw Lem, el poeta del Cosmos DAVID TORRES El escritor polaco Stanislaw Lem, falleció en Cracovia, el 27 de marzo a los 84 años. Era el último, o quizá el penúltimo, de una gloriosa estirpe, la de los grandes genios de la ciencia-ficción. Pero su figura se había agigantado con los años hasta convertirse en un referente absoluto de la literatura fantástica, de la talla de Italo Calvino o Jorge Luis Borges.
    [Show full text]