1,536 research outputs found
Feminism and Film Distribution: An Analysis of Cinenova's Management Committee Meeting Minutes, 1991–97
Cinenova was relaunched in 1991 from the pre-existing women’s distributor, Circles, which had operated throughout the 1980s. In keeping with their founders’ feminist politics, both Circles and Cinenova were run via a non-hierarchical management structure and had as their main focus the distribution, promotion and exhibition of films and videos made by, for and about women. As the funding and economic climate became harsher during the 1990s, however, this organisational model was severely tested, as Cinenova’s workers were forced to try and survive on a more commercially viable basis. This article uses Cinenova’s management committee meeting minutes from 1991–97 to explore how its management practices impacted on its operation and effectiveness
High Hopes for Video: The UK Independent Film and Video Sector's Engagement with the Videocassette
When VHS technology took off in the late 1970s/early 1980s, it triggered widespread hopes in the UK that it would provide the means to deliver non-mainstream moving image work – artists’ film and video, documentary work, political activism, as well as domestic and European feature films – to wider audiences. Correspondence from the Greater London Council, the Arts Council and distributors, as well as press releases, magazine articles and contracts document various initiatives that sprung up amid those hopes in order to enable audiences to access a wider range of moving image work – via the shelves of public libraries and the newly instigated video access libraries, as well as in their own homes through rental and sell-through ventures. This article uses this archive material – available via the Film & Video Distribution Database (http://fv-distribution-database.ac.uk) – to explore the range of these initiatives (especially the library schemes), together with the enthusiasm and concerns to which they gave rise and how these parallel more contemporary initiatives in the digital realm
Year of sacrificing happy for healthy.
https://scholarship.rollins.edu/six-word_memoirs/1031/thumbnail.jp
Representing Scott sets in algebraic settings
We prove that for every Scott set there are -saturated real closed
fields and models of Presburger arithmetic
Real closed exponential fields
In an extended abstract Ressayre considered real closed exponential fields
and integer parts that respect the exponential function. He outlined a proof
that every real closed exponential field has an exponential integer part. In
the present paper, we give a detailed account of Ressayre's construction, which
becomes canonical once we fix the real closed exponential field, a residue
field section, and a well ordering of the field. The procedure is constructible
over these objects; each step looks effective, but may require many steps. We
produce an example of an exponential field with a residue field and a
well ordering such that is low and and are ,
and Ressayre's construction cannot be completed in .Comment: 24 page
A Comparison of Selected Isokinetic Training Velocities on the Development of Muscular Power in College Women
The purpose of this study was to compare the effects of three different isokinetic velocities on the development of muscular power. Seventy-five college females were matched into four equal groups according to the average of their pre-test scores on the Vertical Power Jump Test and the Power Staircase Test. Group I served as the control group, while all 3 of the experimental groups performed the same isokinetic exercise at different pre-set rates of speed. Groups II, III and IV worked at the selected rates of .8, 2.3 and 3.9 inches per second respectively. All four groups were pre-tested and post-tested on a Vertical Power Jump Test and a Power Staircase Test to determine the effect of a six-week training program on power in the ankle-knee-hip extensor groups. An analysis of covariance was utilized to determine the effect of the predetermined isokinetic speeds on the performance of leg power on both the two power tests. The Scheffe Multiple Range Test was employed to determine the nature of the specific difference in the study. A Product Moment correlation coefficient was calculated to estimate the relationship which existed between the Vertical Power Jump Test and the Power Staircase Test. The main findings of this study were:
1. The three different pre-set isokinetic rates of speed significantly improved muscular power in the ankle-knee-hip extensor groups.
2. Although all three selected isokinetic speeds improved leg power, no one speed was significantly more effective as revealed by the results on the two power tests.
3. The Vertical Power Jump Test and the Power Staircase Test correlated for the measurement of muscular power by the ankle-knee-hip extensor muscle groups at the .01 level of significance
- …