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  1. Free Download Big Fiction: How Conglomeration Changed the Publishing Industry and American Literature (Audiobook) English | ASIN: B0D5SFQZ29 | 2024 | 11 hours and 43 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 332 MB Author: Dan Sinykin Narrator: Mike Lenz In the late 1950s, Random House editor Jason Epstein would talk jazz with Ralph Ellison or chat with Andy Warhol while pouring drinks in his office. By the 1970s, editors were poring over profit-and-loss statements. The electronics company RCA bought Random House in 1965, and then other large corporations purchased other formerly independent ✅Publishers. As multinational conglomerates consolidated the industry, the business of literature-and literature itself-transformed. Dan Sinykin explores how changes in the publishing industry have affected fiction, literary form, and what it means to be an author. Giving an inside look at the industry's daily routines, personal dramas, and institutional crises, he reveals how conglomeration has shaped what kinds of books and writers are published. Sinykin examines four different sectors of the publishing industry: mass-market books by brand-name authors like Danielle Steel; trade ✅Publishers that encouraged genre elements in literary fiction; nonprofits such as Graywolf that aspired to protect literature from market pressures; and the distinctive niche of employee-owned W. W. Norton. He emphasizes how women and people of color navigated shifts in publishing, arguing that writers such as Toni Morrison allegorized their experiences in their fiction. This deeply original book recasts the past six decades of American fiction. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/432179db87b38433314cb2cc7d753871/87ja0.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/Cx0UwhXwSo/87ja0.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
  2. Free Download Frostbite: How Refrigeration Changed Our Food, Our Planet, and Ourselves (Audiobook) English | ASIN: B0CKKNC5Z6 | 2024 | 12 hours and 18 minutes | M4B@64 kbps | 356 MB Author: Nicola Twilley Narrator: Nicola Twilley An engaging and far-reaching exploration of refrigeration, tracing its evolution from scientific mystery to globe-spanning infrastructure, and an essential investigation into how it has remade our entire relationship with food-for better and for worse. How often do we open the fridge or peer into the freezer with the expectation that we'll find something fresh and ready to eat? It's an everyday act-but just a century ago, eating food that had been refrigerated was cause for both fear and excitement. The introduction of artificial refrigeration overturned millennia of dietary history, launching a new chapter in human nutrition. We could now overcome not just rot, but seasonality and geography. Tomatoes in January? Avocados in Shanghai? All possible. In Frostbite, New Yorker contributor and cohost of the award-winning podcast Gastropod Nicola Twilley takes listeners on a tour of the cold chain from farm to fridge, visiting off-the-beaten-path landmarks such as Missouri's subterranean cheese caves, the banana-ripening rooms of New York City, and the vast refrigerated tanks that store the nation's orange juice reserves. Today, nearly three-quarters of everything on the average American plate is processed, shipped, stored, and sold under refrigeration. It's impossible to make sense of our food system without understanding the all-but-invisible network of thermal control that underpins it. Twilley's eye-opening book is the first to reveal the transformative impact refrigeration has had on our health and our guts; our farms, tables, kitchens, and cities; global economics and politics; and even our environment. Rapidgator https://rg.to/file/91f6d6af713bc8922813d4b28c2da5ec/vnd4t.rar.html Fikper Free Download https://fikper.com/GJbEssOdaQ/vnd4t.rar.html Links are Interchangeable - No Password - Single Extraction
  3. Ten Birds That Changed the World m4b | 283.59 MB | N/A | Isbn:1783352418 | Author: Stephen Moss | Year: 2023 Description: Download Link: https://rapidgator.net/file/bb098f6eb44a477fed1fce68d7ad4cb3/Stephen.Moss.-.Ten.Birds.That.Changed.the.World.rar https://ddownload.com/hhpoxtn1f2ts/Stephen.Moss.-.Ten.Birds.That.Changed.the.World.rar https://nitroflare.com/view/0C6469E8143BCE8/Stephen.Moss.-.Ten.Birds.That.Changed.the.World.rar
  4. Artist: VA Title: Lust For Life: The Music That Changed a Generation Year Of Release: 2016 Label: Universal Music Genre: Pop, New Wave, Rock, Punk, Hardcore Quality: MP3 320 kbps Total Time: 03:26:15 Total Size: 474 Mb :: Tracklist : :: CD1 : 1. Iggy Pop - Lust For life 2. Blondie - Hanging On The telephone 3. The Ramones - Blitzkreig Bop 4. The Buzzcocks - Ever Fallen In Love 5. Rezillos - Top Of The Pops 6. The Jam - In The City 7. Stiff Little Fingers - Alternative Ulster 8. The Ruts - Babylon's Burning 9. Tom Robinson Band - 2468 Motorway 10. Talking Heads - Psycho Killer 11. The Damned - Smash It Up 12. Skids - Into The Valley 13. The Members - The Sound Of The Suburbs 14. The Slits - I Heard It Through The Grapevine 15. Chelsea - Right To Work 16. Penetration - Don't Dictate 17. Dead Boys - Sonic Reducer 18. 999 - Homicide 19. Angelic Upstarts - I'm An Upstart 20. Dead Kennedys - Holiday In Cambodia CD2 : 1. Undertones - Teenage Kicks 2. The Stranglers - No More Heroes 3. The Only Ones - Another Girl Another Planet 4. Spizzenergi - Where's Captain Kirk 5. Sham 69 - Hersham Boys 6. Ian Dury - Sex & Drugs & Rock & Roll 7. X - Ray Spex - Germ Free Adolescents 8. Joe Jackson - Is She Really Going Out With Him 9. Elvis Costello - Watching The Detectives 10. Public Image Limited - Public Image 11. Devo - Whip It 12. Jags - Back Of My Hand 13. Eddie & The Hotrods - Do Anything You Wanna Do 14. Nick Lowe - I Love The Sound Of Breaking Glass 15. Wire - 12XU 16. The Tubes - White Punks On Dope 17. UK Subs - Stranglehold 18. Magazine - Shot By Both Sides 19. Slaughter & The Dogs - Where Have All The Boot Boys Gone? 20. Television - Marquee Moon CD3 : 1. The Cure - A Forest 2. Teardrop Explodes - Reward 3. Adam & The Ants - Kings Of The Wild Frontier 4. Siouxsie & The Banshees - Happy House 5. Martha & The Muffins - Echo Beach 6. The Knack - My Sharona 7. Hazel O'Connor - Eighth Day 8. Department S - Is Vic there? 9. Jilted John - Jilted John 10. XTC Sgt - Rock 11. The Tourists - I Only Want To Be With You 12. The Piranhas - Tom Hark 13. Boomtown Rats - She's So Modern 14. Jona Lewie - You'll Always Find Me In The Kitchen At Parties 15. Tenpole Tudor - Swords Of A Thousand Men 16. Motors - Airport 17. Lene Lovich - Lucky Number 18. Squeeze - Take Me I'm yours 19. The Flying Lizards - Money 20. The Vapors - Turning Japanese http://uploaded.net/file/n8wvaahr/ajhvd.VA..Lust.For.Life.The.Music.That.Changed.a.Generation.2016.rar http://rapidgator.net/file/9c0210f56a87b189d845baed2615fe17/ajhvd.VA..Lust.For.Life.The.Music.That.Changed.a.Generation.2016.rar.html http://www.filefactory.com/file/5zu7zueyvuvj/ajhvd.VA..Lust.For.Life.The.Music.That.Changed.a.Generation.2016.rar
  5. Ronnie Baker Brooks - Times Have Changed (2016) INFO Title: Times Have Changed Artist : Ronnie Baker Brooks Year : 2016 Genre: Electric Blues Packed size: 128 MB Format : MP3 Bitrate : 320Kbps Tracklist : 01 - Show Me (Feat. Steve Cropper) 02 - Doing Too Much (Feat. 'Big Head' Todd Mohr) 03 - Twine Time (Feat. Lonnie Brooks) 04 - Times Have Changed (Feat. Al Kapone) 05 - Long Story Short 06 - Give Me Your Love (Love Song) (Feat. Angie Stone) 07 - Give The Baby Anything The Baby Wants (Feat. 'Big Head' Todd Mohr & Eddie Willis) 08 - Old Love (Feat. Bobby 'Blue' Bland) 09 - Come On Up (Feat. Felix Cavaliere & Lee Roy Parnell) 10 - Wham Bam Thank You Sam 11 - When I Was We http://uploaded.net/file/52exgs7t/38786271e598823445fad41d4d1807cd47906.rar http://rapidgator.net/file/4db2314bdf7954e517e0f2513c8cb99d/38786271e598823445fad41d4d1807cd47906.rar.html http://www.filefactory.com/file/3vlc5dlbqlyn/38786271e598823445fad41d4d1807cd47906.rar
  6. TTC Video - Great Scientific Ideas That Changed the World Course No. 1120 | .AVI, XviD, 621 kbps, 432x304 | English, MP3, 128 kbps, 2 Ch | 36x30 mins | + PDF Guidebook | 6.2 GB Lecturer: Steven L. Goldman, Ph.D. Why has science so dramatically altered how we live and how we think about ourselves? What is the greatest scientific idea of all time? According to Professor Steven L. Goldman, one is tempted to speak of scientific discoveries as the source of science's power to be a driver of social change-that scientists have been discovering new truths about nature, and that the change follows from that. But I argue that it is scientific ideas that are responsible for this change. Ideas are the source of science's power-not discoveries." Show Full Description And what is the greatest scientific idea of all? For Professor Goldman, that is surely the very idea of science, for as he puts it, "The idea of science itself is an idea that had to be invented." In Great Scientific Ideas That Changed the World, you will explore ideas that-when society has been willing to pursue them-have helped form the foundation of modern life. You'll interpret the term "scientific idea" broadly, so as to include ideas that made science possible at all, as well as ideas that make science immensely powerful. You will discover there is no sharp distinction between ideas that are classified as scientific and those that are classified as philosophical or mathematical, or even between scientific ideas and political, religious, or aesthetic ideas. Alfred North Whitehead, for example, famously linked the emergence of modern science in the Christian West to the belief in a single, law-observing Creator of the universe. The New Dot-Com World New ideas affect society in unpredictable ways. A perfect example is the evolution of the Internet from a modest U.S. Department of Defense-funded computer network project to a global technology that has transformed commerce, industry, politics, warfare, communication, education, entertainment, and research. We are still unfolding the unexpected and sometimes disturbing consequences of a few innovative ideas that enable computers in different locations to share information in real time, ideas that underlie the Internet's astonishing capabilities. What we do know is that science has changed our lives-but how it does so, and why it is able to do so, tells us as much about ourselves as it does about science. Moreover, as unpredictable as science may be, Professor Goldman argues that for 200 years now the interaction of science and technology with society has been the primary driver of social and cultural change, first in the West, then globally, and at an accelerating rate. During this period, social and personal values and relationships; social, political, and economic institutions; and cultural values and activities have changed and continue to change almost beyond anything our great-grandparents (or sometimes even parents) would recognize. What has transformed entire ways of life that had previously been entrenched for centuries or millennia? There are objects, of course-the telephone, automobile, airplane, television, computer-that appear to be causes of social change. But identifying these artifacts does not reach down to the causes of innovation itself, nor does it expose those features of the sociocultural infrastructure that enable innovations to become causes of social change. Artifacts, in spite of their high visibility, are symptoms of causes at work; they are not themselves causes. Learn How Society Affects Ideas It is not only television, the automobile, or the Internet that have changed society. Instead, forces at work in society have caused television and automobiles and the Internet to take on the changing forms they take. One of these forces is ideas-new scientific ideas, originating in the past and subsequently internalized by society. These ideas have shaped both our social and cultural affairs and the lines along which society is most open to change. For instance, the notion that there are laws of nature seems to reflect a political idea. There can be no doubt that mathematical and aesthetic ideas were central to the 17th-century Scientific Revolution. Furthermore, distinguishing science and technology is fuzzy, too-especially since the late 19th century, when scientific knowledge and technological innovation began to be coupled systematically in industrial, academic, and government research laboratories. Each of Professor Goldman's 36 lectures highlights in a provocative way a single idea or development critical to the development of science in the West. The lectures are broadly chronological, beginning with prescientific know-how and the invention of writing, and advancing through modern times all the way to the development of chaos theory. In each lecture, Professor Goldman looks at not only the content of an idea that is fundamental for science, but also how that idea arose and what its impact has been throughout the centuries. In the first third of the course, Professor Goldman engages in a sort of "reverse engineering" of what we mean by science today, identifying the origins of features that now seem essential for the existence of modern science. Lecture 1 begins by looking back at the already impressive prescientific skills and know-how humans had achieved by the 4th century B.C.E., and Lecture 2 discusses the invention of writing and the spread of writing systems and texts from 3500 B.C.E. to the beginning of Classical antiquity. Who Invented Ideas? The invention of writing may not seem a scientific idea at all. Yet there is a profound assumption underlying the invention of writing, whose controversial implications are reflected in Socrates's argument against writing, as recounted in Plato's dialogue Phaedrus. Writing is also a technology and serves as a shining example of how technologies embody ideas, even though we tend to ignore the ideas when our attention dwells only on what the technologies do, how they do it, or what the consequences have been. Between 500 B.C.E. and 300 B.C.E., Greek philosophers developed highly specific concepts of knowledge, reason, truth, nature, mathematics, logic, knowledge of nature, and the use of mathematics to describe nature-all in ways that continue to inform the practice of science to the present day. Lectures 3-5 are devoted to these ideas and their legacies. Lecture 6 discusses the first appearance in Western history, perhaps in world history, of the idea of techno-science-technology derived from theoretical knowledge rather than from practical know-how. This was largely a Greek idea that was applied in the context of the rising Roman Empire, and the lecture describes selected Roman-era technologies that influenced modern science and engineering. Lectures 7-11 explore a set of interrelated developments that together constitute a bridge between the ancient and early modern eras: The idea of the university and its role as a progenitor of modern science Medieval machinery and Europe's first Industrial Revolution The Renaissance ideas of progress, the printed book, and mathematics as the language of nature. All of these ideas are fundamental for science as we know it, and they are also fundamental for the rise of engineering and technological innovation. Lecture 12 discusses Copernicus's idea of a moving Earth, the cultural consequences of that idea, and its subsequent evolution into an astronomical theory. Copernicus himself was wrong about a great deal-for example, planets move in orbits that are elliptical, not circular-but his idea helped clear the way for the foundational ideas of modern science that you'll explore in Lectures 13-17. Among these are the idea of method, mathematical ideas such as algebra and calculus, ideas of conservation and symmetry, the creation of instruments that extend the mind and not only our senses. All together, these ideas created a new conception of knowledge of nature. Lectures 18-28 explore 19th-century scientific ideas of immense social, cultural, intellectual, as well as scientific, influence: Time is an active dimension of reality and not merely a passive measure of change. A chemical atom is an expression of a generic idea of fundamental units with fixed properties out of which nature is composed. The cell theory of life, the germ theory of disease, and the gene theory of inheritance, can all been seen as conceptually allied to the atom idea-to the powerful notion that natural phenomena can be analyzed in terms of fundamental building blocks. Energy, immaterial force fields, and relationships offer a contrasting, yet equally powerful, conception of processes as the most elementary features of nature. Science can be allied systematically with technology-knowing with doing-to synthesize a new world. Evolution epitomizes a process-oriented approach to science and can be extended from biology to scientific thinking generally. Natural phenomena have a fundamentally probabilistic and statistical character. New social institutions can play a pivotal role in science's ability to transform the world. Lectures 29-35 discuss increasingly sophisticated scientific ideas of the 20th century, including relativity, quantum theory, the expanding universe, computer science, information theory, molecular biology; as well as the idea of systems, especially chaotic systems and self-organizing systems, plus the related ideas of ecology. Lecture 36 concludes by reviewing today's ideas about science and technology in upcoming fields such as cognitive neuroscience, bio- and nanotechnology, and physicists' search for a Theory of Everything, and considers ideas, and their likely roles as motivators of future change. 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  7. Plugged: How Hyperconnectivity and the Beam Changed the Way We Think English | 4 hrs 49 mins | ASIN: B00JXQM6O0 | MP3@64 kbps | 137 Mb Genre: Audiobook, Sci-Fi Throughout the 21st Century, our world (at least for those of us inside the NAU) has become increasingly connected. So much so that we really are now thinking as a single fluid organism, changing not just how we live our daily lives, but who we are as a species. In Sterling Gibson's newest thoughtful exploration, one of the NAU's most renowned thinkers explores and illuminates how hyperconnectivity and The Beam have changed us forever. Plugged is a fictional history through the year 2097 set in the world of The Beam. According to the "author" the book is following the "here is my theory, and here are the facts to back it up" style of exposition, while in reality the authors were using it as a method of world-building and providing the fans with more background information without bogging down the series itself with endless exposition. In both instances, the book works fantastically. If you haven't read The Beam then I recommend reading that ahead of time; many of the concepts and events in this book are at least mentioned or implied and knowing where this book is going to end up (as the fictional intended audience already would, as they live in that world of 2097) will lead to enjoying the book more than just coming into it cold. One thing that I did miss, however, was the introduction of Respero (it's need, it's implementation, it's consequences, etc) which isn't touched on at all, and would have enjoyed more information about the AI Clerics although in the context of this book I think that mentioning them was probably enough. Hopefully in the future there can be other "non-fiction" or persuasive books or short stories published by the folks in the future in this world to further flesh things out; for example, an invitation to the Church of West would be fun to read. DOWNLOAD http://rapidgator.net/file/3afabdf4936e2c2b016b85103a999798/Plugged.part1.rar.html http://rapidgator.net/file/0b31847a59fd4e315c4ccc0182beddb7/Plugged.part2.rar.html http://uploaded.net/file/ecqtn1no/Plugged.part1.rar http://uploaded.net/file/innup56x/Plugged.part2.rar http://www.uploadable.ch/file/BrvecFczuGfs/Plugged.part1.rar http://www.uploadable.ch/file/hRJxfQe3CNbe/Plugged.part2.rar http://www.hitfile.net/07J9/Plugged.part1.rar.html http://www.hitfile.net/05cb/Plugged.part2.rar.html
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