Results 21 to 30 of about 461,325 (242)
A book is not only a carrier of information, but also the way of its aesthetic visualization. This actualizes the problem of understanding a book as an artistic artifact. The study of the book in this context implies the identification of several aspects:
N. S. Murashova
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Polish Nationwide Catholic Opinion-Forming Weeklies on Facebook—A Marketing Perspective
The main focus of this paper is on the marketing approach of the use of Facebook by the Polish nationwide Catholic opinion-forming weeklies. The aim of the research is to analyse how the selected media use Facebook (FB) to create a media product ...
Anna Jupowicz-Ginalska +2 more
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Books, books and more books [PDF]
Being a former English teacher, we asked SecEd columnist Susan Elkin to give her opinion on the ending of SATs for our Filling the Void series
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This paper is the first part of a cycle comprising five texts on the marketing use of social media by nationwide opinion-forming Catholic weeklies in Poland.
Andrzej Adamski +2 more
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Joint Provision of Non-audit Services to Audit Clients: Empirical Evidences from India
Executive Summary The provision of non-audit services (NAS) by an incumbent auditor has remained a highly contentious issue. One school argues that the joint provision does not impair an auditor’s independence.
Reshma Kumari Tiwari, Jasojit Debnath
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This paper presents an annotated metadata corpus of English language book reviews from Goodreads and annotation guidelines developed to tag online book reviews for mentions of story world absorption.
Moniek Kuijpers +7 more
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Academia in a Time of Pandemic: An Australian Perspective
Although Australia has (so far) contained the spread of Covid-19 within its population relatively successfully, its universities and academic life have suffered greatly as a result of the pandemic.
Douglas B. Craig
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This dossier gathers articles by five graduates from the Master in International Studies, based at ISCTE – University Institute of Lisbon.
Giulia Daniele, Luís Nuno Rodrigues
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Revisiting John Berger’s seminal essay ‘Why Look at Animals?’ (1980), this essay inverts Berger’s title in order to explore instances where the visibility of animals is at stake and where seeing is linked to forms of surveillance and control.
Anat Pick
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