Via Pensacola: Bulletin of the Deep Water Port of Pensacola, Florida, U.S.A. Vol. 22, No. 9 January 1979. Directory
Frequency: Monthly ; A Project of the Gulf Coast Maritime Digital Portal Project
348 Ergebnisse
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Frequency: Monthly ; A Project of the Gulf Coast Maritime Digital Portal Project
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015082321988
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; ""Serial 96-93.'' ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 80 H781-61 ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015082321665
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; "Serial 96-97." ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 80 H781-67 ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uiug.30112106564617
Issued Apr. 1978. ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; At head of title: 95th Congress, 2d session. Committee print. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 78 S352-2 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015078640037
Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 78 S521-67 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Feb. 1980. ; "Printed for the use of the Committee on Foreign Relations." ; At head of title: 96th Congress, 2d session. Committee print. ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/pur1.32754078079393
Item 1027-A, 1027-B (microfiche). ; "Serial no. 97-35." ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uva.x030515023
Issued Sept. 1978. ; Bibliography: p. 22. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 2
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/mdp.39015083099823
CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 81 S401-17 ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 82 H401-5 ; Includes bibliographical references. ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; Issued Feb. 1, 1978. ; At head of title: 95th Congress, 2d session. Committee print. WMCP: 95-66. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 78 H782-11 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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Reuse of record except for individual research requires license from Congressional Information Service, Inc. ; Aug. 8, 1978. ; At head of title: 95th Congress, 2d session. Committee print. WMCP: 95-94. ; CIS Microfiche Accession Numbers: CIS 78 H782-60 ; Microfiche. ; Mode of access: Internet.
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In: http://hdl.handle.net/2027/uva.x030515010
Issued Jan. 1978. ; Prepared in cooperation with U.S. Environmental Protection Agency, University of Minnesota, and North Dakota State University, under contract EPA-IAG-D6-E766. ; Mode of access: Internet. ; 2
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The relationship between sexuality and politics has always been an underlying assumption of the avant-garde. In recent East German avant-garde literature, the notion of authorship as production has become associated with technological rationality and the patriarchal socialist state. The ensuing crisis of the traditional male author has thus led necessarily to a radicalization of subjectivity and to the politics of gender. A comparison of two contemporary texts, one by a female author, one by a male, shows that the crisis of authorship assumes two distinctly different forms when differences in gender are taken into account. The East German authors Heiner Müller and Christa Wolf have exhibited remarkably similar literary and political developments. Two of their most recent texts, Mülller's Hamletmachine and Wolf's No Place. Nowhere, both address the problematic of traditional male authorship and the disintegration of a preconceived literary gender identity. Yet, these two texts exemplify very different assumptions about the relationship between authorship and the literary tradition. Müller's text suggests the imprisonment of the male author within a petrified system of tradition and images, and hence the necessity of deconstruction. Wolf's text manifests a process of creating a new form of female-identified authorship and the possibility of redefining the tradition of literature and its future.
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