17Th Annual Conference Proceedings
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Dressing for the Times: Fashion in Tang Dynasty China (618-907)
Dressing for the Times: Fashion in Tang Dynasty China (618-907) BuYun Chen Submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of Arts and Sciences COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY 2013 © 2013 BuYun Chen All rights reserved ABSTRACT Dressing for the Times: Fashion in Tang Dynasty China (618-907) BuYun Chen During the Tang dynasty, an increased capacity for change created a new value system predicated on the accumulation of wealth and the obsolescence of things that is best understood as fashion. Increased wealth among Tang elites was paralleled by a greater investment in clothes, which imbued clothes with new meaning. Intellectuals, who viewed heightened commercial activity and social mobility as symptomatic of an unstable society, found such profound changes in the vestimentary landscape unsettling. For them, a range of troubling developments, including crisis in the central government, deep suspicion of the newly empowered military and professional class, and anxiety about waste and obsolescence were all subsumed under the trope of fashionable dressing. The clamor of these intellectuals about the widespread desire to be “current” reveals the significant space fashion inhabited in the empire – a space that was repeatedly gendered female. This dissertation considers fashion as a system of social practices that is governed by material relations – a system that is also embroiled in the politics of the gendered self and the body. I demonstrate that this notion of fashion is the best way to understand the process through which competition for status and self-identification among elites gradually broke away from the imperial court and its system of official ranks. -
Graduation Program December 2017
VICTORIA UNIVERSITY GRADUATION PROGRAM DECEMBER 2017 #vualumni #vicunigrads vu.edu.au CONFERRING OF DEGREES AND GRANTING TABLE OF CONTENTS OF DIPLOMAS AND Our Value Proposition to our Students CERTIFICATES and the Community 1 A Message from the Chancellor 2 12 - 14 December 2017 A Message from the Vice-Chancellor Flemington Racecourse, Grandstand and President 3 Epsom Road, Flemington VIC Victoria University 100 years of opportunity and success 4 At VU, family is everything 5 University Senior Executives 6 Acknowledgement of Country 7 The University Mace – An Established Tradition 7 University Medals for Excellence 7 Academic Dress 8 Welcome to the Alumni Community 9 Social Media 10 GRADUATES College of Arts And Education 12 College of Business 16 College of Engineering and Science 20 College of Health and Biomedicine 21 College of Law and Justice 24 College of Sport and Exercise Science 24 VU College 26 Victoria Polytechnic 29 College Research and Doctoral Award 36 Award of the University 36 Companion of the University 38 Honorary Graduates of the University 1987–2017 39 VICTORIA UNIVERSITY GRADUATION PROGRAM DECEMBER 2017 OUR VALUE PROPOSITION TO OUR STUDENTS AND THE COMMUNITY Victoria University (VU) aims to be a great university of the 21st century by being inclusive rather than exclusive. We will provide exceptional value to our diverse community of students by guiding them to achieve their career aspirations through personalised, flexible, well-supported and industry relevant learning opportunities. Achievement will be demonstrated by our students’ and graduates’ employability and entrepreneurship. The applied and translational research conducted by our staff and students will enhance social and economic outcomes in our heartland communities of the West of Melbourne and beyond. -
P020110307527551165137.Pdf
CONTENT 1.MESSAGE FROM DIRECTOR …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 03 2.ORGANIZATION STRUCTURE …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 05 3.HIGHLIGHTS OF ACHIEVEMENTS …………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 06 Coexistence of Conserve and Research----“The Germplasm Bank of Wild Species ” services biodiversity protection and socio-economic development ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 06 The Structure, Activity and New Drug Pre-Clinical Research of Monoterpene Indole Alkaloids ………………………………………… 09 Anti-Cancer Constituents in the Herb Medicine-Shengma (Cimicifuga L) ……………………………………………………………………………… 10 Floristic Study on the Seed Plants of Yaoshan Mountain in Northeast Yunnan …………………………………………………………………… 11 Higher Fungi Resources and Chemical Composition in Alpine and Sub-alpine Regions in Southwest China ……………………… 12 Research Progress on Natural Tobacco Mosaic Virus (TMV) Inhibitors…………………………………………………………………………………… 13 Predicting Global Change through Reconstruction Research of Paleoclimate………………………………………………………………………… 14 Chemical Composition of a traditional Chinese medicine-Swertia mileensis……………………………………………………………………………… 15 Mountain Ecosystem Research has Made New Progress ………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 16 Plant Cyclic Peptide has Made Important Progress ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 17 Progresses in Computational Chemistry Research ………………………………………………………………………………………………………………… 18 New Progress in the Total Synthesis of Natural Products ……………………………………………………………………………………………………… -
Curriculum Vitæ
Curriculum Vitae Dr. Neal N. Xiong Department of Computer Science and Mathematics Sul Ross State University, TX, USA Emails: [email protected], [email protected] Cell phone: (404)645-4067 Neal N. Xiong, Dr. Associate Professor of Computer Science Department of Computer Science and Mathematics Sul Ross State University, TX, USA Associate Professor, Tenure Track Peer Review List & Promotion are given by this link: https://drive.google.com/drive/u/0/folders/17WyoQRpQbRiFnwyvVDbznXYAjteUr1WO Education Ph.D. Japan Advanced Institute of Science and Technology School of Information Science § Ph.D. earned in March of 2008 § in area: Fault-tolerant System/Networks, GPA 3.67, Rank: 1/27, Top 1% § Thesis: Design and Analysis of Quality of Service on Fault-tolerant Communication Networks (on Network Security) Ph.D. Wuhan University School of Computer Science § Ph.D. earned in June of 2007, Rank: 1/69, Top 1% § in the area of Software Engineering § Thesis: Res. on QoS of Network Based on Congestion Control Schemes (on Network Performance) M.E. Central China Normal University Department of Computer Science § M.E. earned in June of 2004, Rank: 1/18, Top 1% § Thesis: Research on Congestion Control of Many-to-many Multicast (on Network Security) B.E. Hubei University of Technology § Department of Computer Science and Technology § Thesis: Distributed intrusion detection and response system (security software realization) Academic and Professional Experience 2021.7 – Present Sul Ross State University (SR) Department of Computer Science and Mathematics Alpine, TX, USA § Associate Professor, with Tenure Track, 3 years’ Credits for Promotion 1 § Teaching responsibilities include online and live classes in computer science and information systems. -
2011 International Conference on Multimedia Technology
2011 International Conference on Multimedia Technology (ICMT 2011) Hangzhou, China 26-28 July 2011 Pages 1-834 IEEE Catalog Number: CFP1153K-PRT ISBN: 978-1-61284-771-9 1/8 Table Of Content 2DCS: Two Dimensional Random Underdetermined Projection for Image Representation and Classification..............1 Liang Liao, Yanning Zhang, Chao Zhang 3D Human Reconstruction from Multi-image...................................................................................................................6 Chengze Yang, Zhiquan Cheng A Bayes Thresholding Method Based on Edge Protection Strategies...........................................................................12 zhenhua zhang, yuxin zhang, yang pan, linchang xiao A CAVLC Embedded Method for Audio-Video Synchronization Coding Based on H.264............................................16 Xiaoyin Qi, Mianshu Chen, Hexin Chen A classification method of fingerprint quality based on neural network.........................................................................20 Yang Xiu-kun, Luo Yang A Distributed Top-k Query Algorithm Integrated k-Cone Structure for DHT Overlay Networks.....................................24 Guimin HUANG,Yuhong LIANG,Ya ZHOU A Framework for Electronic Pasture Based on WSN....................................................................................................28 Ru Xue,Huan-sheng Song, A-ning Bai A Hue-Saturation Histogram Difference Method to Vehicle Detection..........................................................................31 Tiezhu Yue, Yaping Dai, -
Ancient-Style Prose Anthologies in Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) China
University of Pennsylvania ScholarlyCommons Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations 2017 In The Eye Of The Selector: Ancient-Style Prose Anthologies In Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) China Timothy Robert Clifford University of Pennsylvania, [email protected] Follow this and additional works at: https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations Part of the Asian History Commons, and the Asian Studies Commons Recommended Citation Clifford, Timothy Robert, "In The Eye Of The Selector: Ancient-Style Prose Anthologies In Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) China" (2017). Publicly Accessible Penn Dissertations. 2234. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2234 This paper is posted at ScholarlyCommons. https://repository.upenn.edu/edissertations/2234 For more information, please contact [email protected]. In The Eye Of The Selector: Ancient-Style Prose Anthologies In Ming Dynasty (1368-1644) China Abstract The rapid growth of woodblock printing in sixteenth-century China not only transformed wenzhang (“literature”) as a category of knowledge, it also transformed the communities in which knowledge of wenzhang circulated. Twentieth-century scholarship described this event as an expansion of the non-elite reading public coinciding with the ascent of vernacular fiction and performance literature over stagnant classical forms. Because this narrative was designed to serve as a native genealogy for the New Literature Movement, it overlooked the crucial role of guwen (“ancient-style prose,” a term which denoted the everyday style of classical prose used in both preparing for the civil service examinations as well as the social exchange of letters, gravestone inscriptions, and other occasional prose forms among the literati) in early modern literary culture. This dissertation revises that narrative by showing how a diverse range of social actors used anthologies of ancient-style prose to build new forms of literary knowledge and shape new literary publics. -
2Nd International Symposium on Application of Materials Science and Energy Materials
2nd International Symposium on Application of Materials Science and Energy Materials (SAMSE 2018) IOP Conference Series: Materials Science and Engineering Volume 490 Shanghai, China 17 – 18 December 2018 Part 1 of 3 ISBN: 978-1-5108-8560-8 ISSN: 1757-8981 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 3.0 International Licence. Licence details: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/3.0/. No changes have been made to the content of these proceedings. There may be changes to pagination and minor adjustments for aesthetics. Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2019) For permission requests, please contact the Institute of Physics at the address below. Institute of Physics Dirac House, Temple Back Bristol BS1 6BE UK Phone: 44 1 17 929 7481 Fax: 44 1 17 920 0979 [email protected] Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: 845-758-0400 Fax: 845-758-2633 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com TABLE OF CONTENTS PART 1 CHAPTER 1 – MATERIALS SCIENCE IMPROVING DURABILITY OF WOOD-MIXED WASTE PLASTIC COMPOSITES WITH COMPATIBILIZERS ...........................................................................................................................................................1 Ossi Martikka, Timo Kärki, Ari Puurtinen FRACTURE FAILURE -
2014-2015 Newsletter
2014-2015 Newsletter CONTACT Table of Contents ADDRESS University of Rochester Department of Chemistry 1 Table of Contents 404 Hutchison Hall RC Box 270216 3 Chemistry Department Faculty and Staff Rochester, NY 14627-0216 4 Letter from the Chair PHONE (585) 275-4231 6 Donors to the Chemistry Department EMAIL 9 In Memoriam [email protected] 10 Alumni News WEBSITE www.chem.rochester.edu 15 Focus on Class of 1975 17 Department Mourns the Loss of Esther Conwell CREDITS 20 Harrison Howe Award EDITOR 22 Chemistry-Biology-Biophysics Cluster Retreat 2015 Lynda McGarry 23 New International Student Fellowship Summer Program LAYOUT & DESIGN EDITOR Deb Contestabile 24 Chemistry Welcomes Ellen Matson Yukako Ito (’17) Ursula Bertram (‘18) 25 Chemistry Welcomes Pengfei Huo Faculty News REVIEWING EDITORS 26 Deb Contestabile Faculty Publications Terrell Samoriski 57 63 Commencement 2015 COVER ART AND LOGOS Yukako Ito (’17) 66 Student Awards & Accolades Ursula Bertram (‘18) 71 Doctoral Degrees WRITING CONTRIBUTIONS Department Faculty 73 Postdoctoral Fellows Lynda McGarry 74 Seminars and Colloquia PHOTOGRAPHS Staff News UR Communications 78 John Bertola (B.A. ’09, M.S. ’10W) 83 Instrumentation Ria Tafani Sheridan Vincent 85 Departmental Funds Thomas Krugh UR Friday Photos 86 Alumni Update Form Yukako Ito (’17) Ursula Bertram (‘18) Lynda McGarry COVER UR CHEM LOGO DESIGN Elly York Yukako Ito (‘17) 1 2 Faculty and Staff FACULTY PROFESSORS OF CHEMISTRY Robert K. Boeckman, Jr. STAFF Kara L. Bren Joseph P. Dinnocenzo ASSISTANT CHAIR FOR ADMINISTRATION Richard Eisenberg Kenneth Simolo James M. Farrar Rudi Fasan ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT TO THE CHAIR Ignacio Franco Barbara Snaith Alison J. -
Study on Waterproof and Air Permeability of Inorganic Insulated Decorative Panel
International Forum on Construction, Aviation and Environmental Engineering – Internet of Things (IFCAE-IOT 2018) MATEC Web of Conferences Volume 175 (2018) Guangzhou, China 11-13 May 2018 Editors: Wen-Pei Sung Tao-Yun Han ISBN: 978-1-5108-6598-3 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution license: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0/ You are free to: Share – copy and redistribute the material in any medium or format. Adapt – remix, transform, and build upon the material for any purpose, even commercial. The licensor cannot revoke these freedoms as long as you follow the license terms. Under the following terms: You must give appropriate credit, provide a link to the license, and indicate if changes were made. You may do so in any reasonable manner, but not in any way that suggests the licensor endorses you or your use. The copyright is retained by the corresponding authors. Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2018) For additional information, please contact EDP Sciences – Web of Conferences at the address below. EDP Sciences – Web of Conferences 17, Avenue du Hoggar Parc d'Activité de Courtabœuf BP 112 F-91944 Les Ulis Cedex A France Phone: +33 (0) 1 69 18 75 75 Fax: +33 (0) 1 69 28 84 91 [email protected] Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red -
Celebration of the Strange : Youyang Zazu and Its Horror Stories
CELEBRATION OF THE STRANGE: YOUYANG ZAZU AND ITS HORROR STORIES by LIN WANG (Under the Direction of Karin Myhre) ABSTRACT This dissertation seeks to uncover the artistic appeal and significance of horror tales in Youyang zazu with the assistance of Western concepts and theories. The study begins with an examination of the Youyang zazu collection in its textual and cultural context and argues that it is assembled according to the aesthetic principle of qi which rejects the normal and the familiar, and embraces the unusual, the special, the unique, the odd and the particularized. The study continues with a close analysis of selected horror tales in Youyang zazu using three different approaches—fantastic horror, monster horror and cosmic horror. By analyzing themes, structures and narrative techniques of these horror stories, I argue that these horror stories are integral components of the Youyang zazu collection. They add vitality and tension to the representation of the strange and advance the collection in its aesthetic pursuit of qi. These three approaches each emphasize a different aspect in the representation of the strange. From the literary mechanism that generates strangeness, to the very entity that embodies the strange and to the atmosphere that highlights the incomprehensibility and uncontrollability of the strange, each approach offers a unique perspective on how the effect of strangeness is conveyed and amplified. By investigating the aesthetic issues at play in the medium of horror and in the context of zhiguai through the lens of Western concepts, my study also explores the possibility of examining zhiguai tales from new literary perspectives and provides fresh critical insights on the poetics of Chinese horror narrative in general. -
International Conference on Engineering and Business Management 2010
International Conference on Engineering and Business Management 2010 (EBM 2010) Chengdu, China 25 - 27 March 2011 Volume 1 of 4 Pages 1 - 740 ISBN: 978-1-61782-807-2 Printed from e-media with permission by: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 Some format issues inherent in the e-media version may also appear in this print version. Copyright© (2010) by the Scientific Research Publishing Inc. All rights reserved. Printed by Curran Associates, Inc. (2011) For permission requests, please contact the Scientific Research Publishing Inc. at the address below. Scientific Research Publishing Inc. P.O. Box 54821 Irvine, CA 92619-4821 Phone: (408) 329-4591 [email protected] Additional copies of this publication are available from: Curran Associates, Inc. 57 Morehouse Lane Red Hook, NY 12571 USA Phone: 845-758-0400 Fax: 845-758-2634 Email: [email protected] Web: www.proceedings.com Contents Volume 1 Entrepreneurship, Decision and Investment A Study of Corporate Information Disclosure in Social Responsibility Crisis Based on Subjective Game Yongsheng GE………………………………………………………………………………………………………………………(1) The Influence Degree of Management Active Behaviors on Financial Ratios Adjustment Jianguang Zhang, Valerie Zhu, Junrui Zhang, Linyan Sun, Donglin Liu…………………………………………………………(5) A Financial Warning Method for the Listed Companies of Information Industry Based on Bayesian Rough Set Zhang Hongmei, Tong Yuesong…………………………………………………………………………………………………(12) Research on relationship between top management team incentive, ownership -
Text and Its Cultural Interpretation
TEXT AND ITS CULTURAL INTERPRETATION I. Alimov MORE ABOUT SUN GUANG-XIAN AND BEI MENG SUO YAN1* There is very little information remaining about Sun “Generations [of the Song family] worked on the Guang-xian (孫光憲, 895?—968, second name land, but only Guang-xian began studying diligently Meng-wen 孟文, pen-name Baoguang-zi 葆光子); from a young age”, even his exact date of birth is not known [1]. His life- time came at the very end of the Tang rule, the period it is stated in Song dynastic history. Sun Guang-xian of the Five Dynasties and the first years of the Song was the first in his family who resolved to escape from dynasty. Information on where Sun came from is also poverty, and set his mind on science, book-learning, contradictory: well-known Song bibliophile Chen arts and achieved considerable results in these areas. Zheng-sun (陳振孫, 1190—1249) wrote in his bibliog- He followed the path of an official: he successfully raphy [2] that Sun Guang-xian was originally from passed the examinations and joined the public service Guiping in the region of Lingzhou (in the north-east and his first appointment the post of administrative part of what now is the Renshouxian district of assistant of his home region of Lingzhou [6]. The au- Sichuan province) [3], and the meagre biography of thor of “Springs and Autumns of the Ten Kingdoms”, Sun Guang-xian in Song dynastic history (j. 483) says Qing historian Wu Zhi-yi (吳志伊, second half of the same. Still, one of the most well-known works by 17th—first half of 18th century), says that it was at the him Bei meng suo yan (北夢瑣言, “Short Sayings from end of the rule of the Tang dynasty.