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Myth, Metatext, Continuity and Cataclysm in Dc Comics’ Crisis on Infinite Earths
WORLDS WILL LIVE, WORLDS WILL DIE: MYTH, METATEXT, CONTINUITY AND CATACLYSM IN DC COMICS’ CRISIS ON INFINITE EARTHS Adam C. Murdough A Thesis Submitted to the Graduate College of Bowling Green State University in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of MASTER OF ARTS August 2006 Committee: Angela Nelson, Advisor Marilyn Motz Jeremy Wallach ii ABSTRACT Angela Nelson, Advisor In 1985-86, DC Comics launched an extensive campaign to revamp and revise its most important superhero characters for a new era. In many cases, this involved streamlining, retouching, or completely overhauling the characters’ fictional back-stories, while similarly renovating the shared fictional context in which their adventures take place, “the DC Universe.” To accomplish this act of revisionist history, DC resorted to a text-based performative gesture, Crisis on Infinite Earths. This thesis analyzes the impact of this singular text and the phenomena it inspired on the comic-book industry and the DC Comics fan community. The first chapter explains the nature and importance of the convention of “continuity” (i.e., intertextual diegetic storytelling, unfolding progressively over time) in superhero comics, identifying superhero fans’ attachment to continuity as a source of reading pleasure and cultural expressivity as the key factor informing the creation of the Crisis on Infinite Earths text. The second chapter consists of an eschatological reading of the text itself, in which it is argued that Crisis on Infinite Earths combines self-reflexive metafiction with the ideologically inflected symbolic language of apocalypse myth to provide DC Comics fans with a textual "rite of transition," to win their acceptance for DC’s mid-1980s project of self- rehistoricization and renewal. -
Harlequin RIP OEM Manual
0RIPMate for Windows operating systems Harlequin PLUS Server RIP v9.0 June 2011 AG12325 Rev. 13 Copyright and Trademarks Harlequin PLUS Server RIP June 2011 Part number: HK‚9.0‚ÄìOEM‚ÄìWIN Document issue: 106 Copyright ¬© 2011 Global Graphics Software Ltd. All rights reserved. Certificate of Computer Registration of Computer Software. Registration No. 2006SR05517 No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, elec- tronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording, or otherwise, without the prior written permission of Global Graphics Software Ltd. The information in this publication is provided for information only and is subject to change without notice. Global Graphics Software Ltd and its affiliates assume no responsibility or liability for any loss or damage that may arise from the use of any information in this publication. The software described in this book is furnished under license and may only be used or cop- ied in accordance with the terms of that license. Harlequin is a registered trademark of Global Graphics Software Ltd. The Global Graphics Software logo, the Harlequin at Heart Logo, Cortex, Harlequin RIP, Harlequin ColorPro, EasyTrap, FireWorks, FlatOut, Harlequin Color Management System (HCMS), Harlequin Color Production Solutions (HCPS), Harlequin Color Proofing (HCP), Harlequin Error Diffusion Screening Plugin 1-bit (HEDS1), Harlequin Error Diffusion Screening Plugin 2-bit (HEDS2), Harlequin Full Color System (HFCS), Harlequin ICC Profile Processor (HIPP), Harlequin Standard Color System (HSCS), Harlequin Chain Screening (HCS), Harlequin Display List Technology (HDLT), Harlequin Dispersed Screening (HDS), Harlequin Micro Screening (HMS), Harlequin Precision Screening (HPS), HQcrypt, Harlequin Screening Library (HSL), ProofReady, Scalable Open Architecture (SOAR), SetGold, SetGoldPro, TrapMaster, TrapWorks, TrapPro, TrapProLite, Harlequin RIP Eclipse Release and Harlequin RIP Genesis Release are all trademarks of Global Graphics Software Ltd. -
The Monroe County Comprehensive Plan Addresses the Data Inventory Requirements of 9J‐5.0005 (2) of the Florida Administrative Code (F.A.C.)
Monroe County Comprehensive Plan Update HOUSING Table of Contents Item Page 7.0 HOUSING ELEMENT.................................................................................................................................... 1 7.1 Introduction..................................................................................................................................... 1 7.1.1 Policy Framework........................................................................................................... 1 7.1.2 Residential Land Use Characteristics...................................................................11 7.2 Existing Housing Stock Characteristics..............................................................................12 7.2.1 Type of Housing ............................................................................................................12 7.2.2 Occupancy and Tenure ..............................................................................................14 7.2.3 Vacancy Status ...............................................................................................................16 7.2.4 Age of Housing ..............................................................................................................18 7.2.5 Price/Rent Characteristics and Affordability ..................................................19 7.2.6 Cost to Income Ratios ................................................................................................29 7.2.7 Structural Conditions of Housing Stock .............................................................31 -
John Constantine and the Homoaffective Question: an Analysis of LGBTI+ Representations in Superhero Comics and Animations
John Constantine and the homoaffective question: an analysis of LGBTI+ representations in superhero comics and animations JOHN CONSTANTINE AND THE HOMOAFFECTIVE QUESTION: AN ANALYSIS OF LGBTI+ REPRESENTATIONS IN SUPERHERO COMICS AND ANIMATIONS JOHN CONSTANTINE E A QUESTÃO HOMOAFETIVA: UMA ANÁLISE SOBRE REPRESENTAÇÕES LGBTI+ EM QUADRINHOS DE SUPER-HERÓIS E ANIMAÇÕES JOHN CONSTANTINE Y LA PREGUNTA HOMOAFFECTIVE: UN ANÁLISIS DE LAS REPRESENTACIONES LGBTI+ EN CÓMICS DE SUPERHÉROES Y ANIMACIONES Mário Jorge de PAIVA1 ABSTRACT: This article is an analysis of LGBTI + representations in comic books, superheroes, and children's animations. In particular, we will approach the character of DC Comics John Constantine, bisexual, because he is a hero of a major publisher, appearing alongside Batman, Superman etc. Our methodology is qualitative, based on a broad contribution containing: Michel Foucault, Sarane Alexandrian, James Green, João Trevisan, Dandara Cruz among others. Our conclusions involve seeing how there has really been a profound change over time. If before this type of question could not be addressed as much, or could not be addressed explicitly, today there is a greater opening for representations of LGBTI + characters. KEYWORDS: LGBTI+. Comics. Animations. John Constantine. Hellblazer. RESUMO: O presente artigo é uma análise das representações LGBTI+ em revistas de super-heróis e animações. Abordaremos mais a personagem da DC Comics John Constantine, bissexual, por ele ser um herói de uma grande editora, aparecendo junto ao Batman, Superman etc. Nossa metodologia é qualitativa, se pautando em uma análise inicial do campo de estudos e na sequência em uma análise mais aprofundada da própria personagem Constantine. Possuímos um aporte teórico que envolve, entre outros autores: Michel Foucault, Sarane Alexandrian e Dandara Cruz. -
(King Philip's War), 1675-1676 Dissertation Presented in Partial
Connecticut Unscathed: Victory in The Great Narragansett War (King Philip’s War), 1675-1676 Dissertation Presented in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree Doctor of Philosophy in the Graduate School of The Ohio State University By Major Jason W. Warren, M.A. Graduate Program in History The Ohio State University 2011 Dissertation Committee: John F. Guilmartin Jr., Advisor Alan Gallay, Kristen Gremillion Peter Mansoor, Geoffrey Parker Copyright by Jason W. Warren 2011 Abstract King Philip’s War (1675-1676) was one of the bloodiest per capita in American history. Although hostile native groups damaged much of New England, Connecticut emerged unscathed from the conflict. Connecticut’s role has been obscured by historians’ focus on the disasters in the other colonies as well as a misplaced emphasis on “King Philip,” a chief sachem of the Wampanoag groups. Although Philip formed the initial hostile coalition and served as an important leader, he was later overshadowed by other sachems of stronger native groups such as the Narragansetts. Viewing the conflict through the lens of a ‘Great Narragansett War’ brings Connecticut’s role more clearly into focus, and indeed enables a more accurate narrative for the conflict. Connecticut achieved success where other colonies failed by establishing a policy of moderation towards the native groups living within its borders. This relationship set the stage for successful military operations. Local native groups, whether allied or neutral did not assist hostile Indians, denying them the critical intelligence necessary to coordinate attacks on Connecticut towns. The English colonists convinced allied Mohegan, Pequot, and Western Niantic warriors to support their military operations, giving Connecticut forces a decisive advantage in the field. -
CRWG South Shore Report
Table of Contents Executive Summary Acknowledgments 1. Introduction 2. Coastal Processes 3. Falmouth’s South Shore 4. The Future of Falmouth’s South Shore 5. Recommendations 6. Conclusions 7. Endnotes 8. Bibliography and Resources 9. Appendices A. Mapping and Analysis of Falmouth’s South Coastal Zone Properties B. Shoreline Change Along Falmouth’s South Shore C. Criteria for Prioritizing Acquisition of Coastal Parcels D. Recommendations Concerning Coastal Policy and Regulations E. Coastal Management Tools F. Regional Policy Plan Compared to the Local Comprehensive Plan G. Values of the Coastal Zone H. Description of Process Used by the Coastal Resources Working Group 10. Large-format maps and tables accompanying Appendix A The Future of Falmouth’s South Shore i May 23, 2003 Final Report by the Coastal Resources Working Group Town of Falmouth, MA This page intentionally left blank. The Future of Falmouth’s South Shore ii May 23, 2003 Final Report by the Coastal Resources Working Group Town of Falmouth, MA Executive Summary In April, 2000, the Falmouth Board of Selectmen formed the Coastal Resources Working Group (CRWG) and charged the Group to explore reasons for the current condition of the coastal zone and to provide future scenarios for the coastal zone based on an understanding of physical processes and management approaches. The fundamental finding of the Coastal Resources Working Group (CRWG) is that over the past 150 years, the Falmouth shoreline has been developed in a manner that has significantly impaired the ability of the coast to evolve in response to natural processes, leading to an overall decrease in the viability of the coastal system. -
Catskill Trails, 9Th Edition, 2010 New York-New Jersey Trail Conference
Catskill Trails, 9th Edition, 2010 New York-New Jersey Trail Conference Index Feature Map (141N = North Lake Inset) Acra Point 141 Alder Creek 142, 144 Alder Lake 142, 144 Alder Lake Loop Trail 142, 144 Amber Lake 144 Andrus Hollow 142 Angle Creek 142 Arizona 141 Artists Rock 141N Ashland Pinnacle 147 Ashland Pinnacle State Forest 147 Ashley Falls 141, 141N Ashokan High Point 143 Ashokan High Point Trail 143 Ashokan Reservoir 143 Badman Cave 141N Baldwin Memorial Lean-To 141 Balsam Cap Mountain (3500+) 143 Balsam Lake 142, 143 Balsam Lake Mountain (3500+) 142 Balsam Lake Mountain Fire Tower 142 Balsam Lake Mountain Lean-To 142, 143 Balsam Lake Mountain Trail 142, 143 Balsam Lake Mountain Wild Forest 142, 143 Balsam Mountain 142 Balsam Mountain (3500+) 142 Bangle Hill 143 Barkaboom Mountain 142 Barkaboom Stream 144 Barlow Notch 147 Bastion Falls 141N Batavia Kill 141 Batavia Kill Lean-To 141 Batavia Kill Recreation Area 141 Batavia Kill Trail 141 Bear Hole Brook 143 Bear Kill 147 Bearpen Mountain (3500+) 145 Bearpen Mountain State Forest 145 Beaver Kill 141 Beaver Kill 142, 143, 144 Beaver Kill Range 143 p1 Beaver Kill Ridge 143 Beaver Meadow Lean-To 142 Beaver Pond 142 Beaverkill State Campground 144 Becker Hollow 141 Becker Hollow Trail 141 Beech Hill 144 Beech Mountain 144 Beech Mountain Nature Preserve 144 Beech Ridge Brook 145 Beecher Brook 142, 143 Beecher Lake 142 Beetree Hill 141 Belleayre Cross Country Ski Area 142 Belleayre Mountain 142 Belleayre Mountain Lean-To 142 Belleayre Ridge Trail 142 Belleayre Ski Center 142 Berry Brook -
VHSL Districts Round #6
VHSL Districts Round 6 First Period, Fifteen Tossups 1. The first character of this name had a weakness against wood and fought villains such as Solomon Grundy and Harlequin. The most famous person to hold this title became the Spectre until his 2005 resurrection to retake this title. This role was first occupied by Alan Scott, while a later version was replaced after turning into the villain Parallax. Ryan Reynolds is slated to play this character in a 2011 film. His identities include Kyle Rayner and Hal Jordan. For 10 points, name this DC superhero who gets his color from a power ring. ANSWER: Green Lantern 002-09-3-06101 2. At one point in this novel, Noah leaves his family to live by a river and survive on fish. Characters in this novel include the preacher Jim Casy, Connie Rivers, and Rivers' wife, Rose of Sharon. Another character in this novel dies crossing the Mojave Desert. That character's husband doesn't want to leave Oklahoma in this novel, although the rest of the central family supports the trek to California. For 10 points, name this novel about the Depression-era Joad family by John Steinbeck. ANSWER: The Grapes of Wrath 024-09-3-06102 3. This man composed a piece that includes a musical illustration of bath water, entitled Symphonia Domestica. "Of the Backworldsmen" and "Of Science" are among the sections of another of this man's works. A folk hero disguises himself as a monk and is hanged in this composer's Till Eulenspiegel's Merry Pranks. -
Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities
Curt Teich Postcard Archives Towns and Cities Alaska Aialik Bay Alaska Highway Alcan Highway Anchorage Arctic Auk Lake Cape Prince of Wales Castle Rock Chilkoot Pass Columbia Glacier Cook Inlet Copper River Cordova Curry Dawson Denali Denali National Park Eagle Fairbanks Five Finger Rapids Gastineau Channel Glacier Bay Glenn Highway Haines Harding Gateway Homer Hoonah Hurricane Gulch Inland Passage Inside Passage Isabel Pass Juneau Katmai National Monument Kenai Kenai Lake Kenai Peninsula Kenai River Kechikan Ketchikan Creek Kodiak Kodiak Island Kotzebue Lake Atlin Lake Bennett Latouche Lynn Canal Matanuska Valley McKinley Park Mendenhall Glacier Miles Canyon Montgomery Mount Blackburn Mount Dewey Mount McKinley Mount McKinley Park Mount O’Neal Mount Sanford Muir Glacier Nome North Slope Noyes Island Nushagak Opelika Palmer Petersburg Pribilof Island Resurrection Bay Richardson Highway Rocy Point St. Michael Sawtooth Mountain Sentinal Island Seward Sitka Sitka National Park Skagway Southeastern Alaska Stikine Rier Sulzer Summit Swift Current Taku Glacier Taku Inlet Taku Lodge Tanana Tanana River Tok Tunnel Mountain Valdez White Pass Whitehorse Wrangell Wrangell Narrow Yukon Yukon River General Views—no specific location Alabama Albany Albertville Alexander City Andalusia Anniston Ashford Athens Attalla Auburn Batesville Bessemer Birmingham Blue Lake Blue Springs Boaz Bobler’s Creek Boyles Brewton Bridgeport Camden Camp Hill Camp Rucker Carbon Hill Castleberry Centerville Centre Chapman Chattahoochee Valley Cheaha State Park Choctaw County -
SUMMER 1993 PAGE THREE in 1926, Powers a Saw Mill, a Woodworking Shop, and a Feed E.A.I.A
THE MILL Sawyers and Millwrights AT LEDYARD, of Saugerties, New York CONNECTICUT I n response to my request for information on up-and.-down sawmills, a friend in Albany county, New York, sent a draw ing of a blade he had document ed on a mill at Kent, Connecti cut, and a letter telling of anot-her vertical mill he had discovered in Ledyard, Connect icut. He had visited the Led yard site in July but it was not in operation because the water in the millpond was low. He planned to go back in April or May of this year when the mill would De working and open to the public. In early May I called the number he had given me and was told b,y Ruth Dyer, one of the volunteers at the site, that the mill had just suffered a major breakdown. The men who O1arlie i:nd Michael Rothe TrainiQ9 Their Tean, Michael operate and maintain it were keeps six Belgian hOrses for logglng. They are ideal for working on the problem but were selective harvesting and do less dcmage to the forest than not sure when it would be oper modern diesel equipment, (Photo by P.Sinclair) ational. I told her I would come anyway. Afterall, mainte nance and repair are important aspects of a water mill. Ithough little remains in the vritten record, some Ledyard, Connecticut, is A a hilly township a few miles believed there was a sawmill in the mid-Hudson Valley at from the states southern coast the present town of Saugerties, New York, before the area It lies in the watershed of the was formally settled in the 168Os. -
Geographic Names
GEOGRAPHIC NAMES CORRECT ORTHOGRAPHY OF GEOGRAPHIC NAMES ? REVISED TO JANUARY, 1911 WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1911 PREPARED FOR USE IN THE GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE BY THE UNITED STATES GEOGRAPHIC BOARD WASHINGTON, D. C, JANUARY, 1911 ) CORRECT ORTHOGRAPHY OF GEOGRAPHIC NAMES. The following list of geographic names includes all decisions on spelling rendered by the United States Geographic Board to and including December 7, 1910. Adopted forms are shown by bold-face type, rejected forms by italic, and revisions of previous decisions by an asterisk (*). Aalplaus ; see Alplaus. Acoma; township, McLeod County, Minn. Abagadasset; point, Kennebec River, Saga- (Not Aconia.) dahoc County, Me. (Not Abagadusset. AQores ; see Azores. Abatan; river, southwest part of Bohol, Acquasco; see Aquaseo. discharging into Maribojoc Bay. (Not Acquia; see Aquia. Abalan nor Abalon.) Acworth; railroad station and town, Cobb Aberjona; river, IVIiddlesex County, Mass. County, Ga. (Not Ackworth.) (Not Abbajona.) Adam; island, Chesapeake Bay, Dorchester Abino; point, in Canada, near east end of County, Md. (Not Adam's nor Adams.) Lake Erie. (Not Abineau nor Albino.) Adams; creek, Chatham County, Ga. (Not Aboite; railroad station, Allen County, Adams's.) Ind. (Not Aboit.) Adams; township. Warren County, Ind. AJjoo-shehr ; see Bushire. (Not J. Q. Adams.) Abookeer; AhouJcir; see Abukir. Adam's Creek; see Cunningham. Ahou Hamad; see Abu Hamed. Adams Fall; ledge in New Haven Harbor, Fall.) Abram ; creek in Grant and Mineral Coun- Conn. (Not Adam's ties, W. Va. (Not Abraham.) Adel; see Somali. Abram; see Shimmo. Adelina; town, Calvert County, Md. (Not Abruad ; see Riad. Adalina.) Absaroka; range of mountains in and near Aderhold; ferry over Chattahoochee River, Yellowstone National Park. -
Tree Trimming Plan
Wagner Wildlife Sanctuary EAST LYME Eightmile River Wildlife Area 11Y1 Oxoboxo River Water Access 68 5L OH Primary 2019 Trimming 1 Eightmile River Wildlife Area 1 Enhanced Tree Trimming 11Y 1 Backbone Maintenance Trimming Y 1 1 Scheduled Maintenance Trimming Nehantic State Forest 1 1 Y Substations 1 Town Boundary State Forest 1 5 L State Park or Preserve 1 9 6 L 8 Y 0 Nehantic State Forest 1 Wildlife Area or Sanctuary 4 Powers Lake 1 1 9 5 L Other DEP Property L Norwich Pond 0 6 4 8 9 L 9L04 0 Beckett Hill State Park Scenic Reserve 8 Bayonet Street Uncas Pond Pattagansett Lake Town Mileage Summary 9 L Pattagansett Lake Water Access 0 4 ETT: 1.56 FLANDERS BB METT: 9.25 Nehantic State Forest SMT: 22.39 Lords Cove Wildlife Area 7 Total: 33.19 L0 Lords Cove Wildlife Area 9 9 L Lords Cove Wildlife1 Area Gorton Pond 5 0 7 L 15L68 Jordan Cove Water Access 6 Gorton Pond Water Access 8 Ferry Point Marsh Wildlife Area Dodge Pond Niantic River Water Access Dodge Pond Lieutenant River Water Access Rocky Neck State Park Connecticut River Water Access (Old Saybrook) Bride Brook Wildlife Sanctuary Lieutenant River Water Access Jordan Cove Water Access 0 0.5 1 2 3 4 Rocky Neck State Park Harkness Memorial State Park Miles Great Island Wildlife Area Rocky Neck State Park 2 1 Dock Road Water Access Ragged Rock Creek Marsh Wildlife Area Y 2 Harkness Memorial State Park Great Island Wildlife Area Fourmile River Water Access 2 PROPRIETARY INFORMATION: The material contained on the 1 Seaside State Park Y Overhead Distribution Circuit Map shall be considered proprietary to Eversource (ES), and Users (which shall be defined as any person Great Island Wildlife Area Rocky Neck State Park 2 or entity who has received the Map through sale, purchase, exchange gift, or otherwise) shall keep it in confidence and shall not furnish or Great Island Wildlife Area disclose it to any third party without the prior written permission of Eversource.