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         Modernism & Post-modernism Art:     more books (89)
  1. The Dog in Art: From Rococo to Post-Modernism by Robert Rosenblum, 1988
  2. The Advent of Modernism: Post Impressionism and North American Art, 1900-1918 by Peter; Zilczer, Judith, and Agee, William Morrin, 1986-01-01
  3. MODERN ART Impressionism to post-modernism by David, ed. BRITT, 1989-01-01
  4. Modern ArtImpressionsm To Post-Modernism
  5. ADVENT OF MODERNISM: POST IMPRESSIONISM AND NORTH AMERICAN ART, 1900-1918. by Peter et al. Morrin, 1986
  6. Architecture: From Prehistory to Post Modernism, Reprint by Institute of Fine Arts, New York Universit Marvin Trachtenberg , 1980
  7. The Feminist Aesthetics of Virginia Woolf: Modernism, Post-Impressionism, and the Politics of the Visual by Jane Goldman, 2001-01-08
  8. Art of the Western World: From Ancient Greece to Post Modernism by Bruce Cole, 1991-12-15
  9. From Expressionism to Post-Modernism: Styles and Movements in 20th Century Western Art (Grove Art Series)
  10. ART OF THE WESTERN WORLD From Ancient Greece to Post Modernism by Michael Wood, 1989
  11. Towards Post-modernism: Design Since 1851 by Michael Collins, 1994-07
  12. Religion and Its Relevance in Post-Modernism: Essays in Honor of Jack C. Verheyden
  13. From Neo-Renaissance to Post-Modernism: Hundred and Twenty-Five Years of Dutch Interiors by Ellinor Bergvelt, etc., 1996-08
  14. Design in the Twentieth Century: Post-Modernism (1990s) by Hannah Ford, 2000-04-19

21. AR361-3-FY:course Catalogue
University of Essex (link to home page), AR3613-FY art in the UnitedStates From modernism to Post-modernism. Year 2002/2003 Department
http://www2.essex.ac.uk/courses/pages/AR361-3-FY.asp
A to Z departments about the university travel ... help
AR361-3-FY: ART IN THE UNITED STATES: FROM MODERNISM TO POSTMODERNISM
Year: 2002/2003 Department: Art History and Theory Essex credit:
ECTS credit: Available to year(s) of study: Pre-requisites:
None
Co-requisites:
None Staff Supervisor: Dr Neil Cox Teaching Staff: Dr Neil Cox, Dr Michaela Giebelhausen Contact details: Libby Armstrong, tel: (0)1206 872200; email: libby@essex.ac.uk
International Programmes: Available to International Programmes Students
SOCRATES: Available to Socrates Students
Outside Option: Available as an outside option
Course is taught during the following terms: Autumn Spring Summer Course Description
This course allows students to gain a good general knowledge of the range of Twentieth Century US Art, but also includes more detailed study of the crucial post-1945 developments which made the United States a leading nation in contemporary artistic production and consumption. Students on the course should expect to confront (or be confronted by) radical works of art. The first part of this course will examine the existing forms of non-academic art in the States at the turn of the century, and the importance of realist painters. This desire to represent the States and its people (especially city dwellers) is followed through into the work of many significant artists in the twenties and thirties . The politicisation of this tradition (into Regionalism and Social or Socialist Realism) in the thirties clearly relates to the socio-economic crisis, and is also the context for the significant contribution of the Mexican muralists.

22. Pop Art And The Origins Of Post-modernism Sylvia Harrison Pop Art Postmodernism
Pop art and the Origins of Postmodernism Sylvia Harrison Pop art Postmodernismin art design USA c 1960 to c 1970 c 1970 to c 1980 c 1980 to c 1990 c 1990
http://www.poem-store.co.uk/Sylvia-Harrison-Pop-Art-and-the-Origins-o-0521791154
Title: Pop Art and the Origins of Post-modernism
Author: Sylvia Harrison
Thomas A Garrity All the Mathe...
Patricia M Wallace Psychology ...

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Mary Jones Biology...
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23. Postmodernism - Wikipedia
modern academic and nonacademic disciplines; philosophy, art, architecture, film Exactlywhen modernism began to give way to post-modernism is difficult
http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Postmodernism
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Postmodernism
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia. The term " Postmodernism " refers to a philosophical and cultural movement that is notoriously difficult to define, but distinguished largely by its rejection of modernism . The term is hard to define precisely due to one of its central premises: the rejection of " meta-narratives ", ways of thinking that unite knowledge and experience to seek to provide a definitive, universal truth. Also adding confusion to the debate surrounding its definition and significance is the fact that modernity and modernism are not easy to define. Postmodernists claim that modernity was characterised by a monolothic mindset impossible to maintain in the culturally diverse and fragmented world (which is sometimes refered as postmodernity ) that we live in today. Postmodernism, instead, embraces fluid and multiple perspectives, typically refusing to privilege any one 'truth claim' over another. Ideals of universally applicable truths give way to provisional, decentred, local 'petit recits' which, rather than referencing some underlying universal reality, point only to other ideas and cultural artefacts, themselves subject to interpretation and re-interpretation.

24. Art Books : Modernism Architecture UK
Postmodernism on Trial (Architectural Design Profile, No. See picture, modernismReborn by Michael Webb Style-architecture and Building-art Transformations of
http://www.dropbears.com/b/books_uk/art/modernism_architecture.htm
Books on Modernism Architecture Related Books Art Index
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Books All Products Music VHS DVD Video Games Electronics Software Modern Furniture Classics: Postwar to Post-modernism
by Charlotte Fiell, Peter Fiell
Thames and Hudson
Paperback - 17 September, 2001 On Foster..Foster on (Architecture) by Norman Foster, et al Prestel Publishing Ltd Hardcover - 18 August, 2000 Tropical Modernism by James Grayson Trulove (Editor) Hearst Books International (HBI) Hardcover - 6 December, 2001 Modernism by Richard Weston Phaidon Press Paperback - May 2001 The New Paradigm in Architecture: The Language of Post-modernism by Charles Jencks Yale University Press Paperback - 14 June, 2002 by Barbara Goldstein (Editor), Esther McCoy (Unknown) Paperback - 1 July, 1998 by PERMANYER The Monacelli Press Hardcover - June 2003 Not yet published by Lisa Skolnik Friedman/Fairfax Publishing Hardcover - 1 June, 2000 Modernism in Italian Architecture, 1890-1940 by Richard A. Etlin The MIT Press Hardcover - September 1991 Alvar Aalto: Towards a Human Modernism by Winfried Nerdinger (Editor) Prestel Publishing Ltd Paperback - 1 June, 1999

25. WileyEurope :: What Is Post-Modernism?, 4th Edition
Provides a lucid exposition of Postmodernism in art and architecture. This bookclarifies a tradition that is thriving but still very much misunderstood.
http://www.wileyeurope.com/cda/product/0,,1854904280,00.html
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By Keyword By Title By Author By ISBN By ISSN WileyEurope Special Topics What is Post-Modernism?, 4th Edition Related Subjects
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Civic Builders (Hardcover)

The Architecture of the Jumping Universe: A Polemic: How Complexity Science is Changing Architecture and Culture, Revised Edition (Paperback)

The Post-Modern Reader (Paperback)
Theories and Manifestoes of Contemporary Architecture (Paperback) Special Topics Maggie Toy (Editor) From Shinto to Ando: Studies in Architectural Anthropology in Japan (Paperback) How Architecture Works (Paperback) Douglas E. Gordon, Stephanie Stubbs Baillie Scott: The Artistic House (Paperback) Diane Haigh Sci-Fi Aesthetics (Paperback) Rachel Armstrong (Editor) Special Topics What is Post-Modernism?, 4th Edition Charles Jencks ISBN: 1-85490-428-0 Paperback 81 Pages June 1996 Add to Cart Description Table of Contents Provides a lucid exposition of Post-Modernism in art and architecture. This book clarifies a tradition that is thriving but still very much misunderstood. The reader is presented with many examples of art and architecture appropriate to Post-Modernism as well as being introduced to the history which preceded it, facilitating a much clearer understanding of the overall concept and initiating a thirst for more.

26. A Review Of Moggin's Post-modernism FAQ
point to the equivalent of modern art in many modernism pointed to here is the modernismof 20th Postmodernism, as portrayed here, is a continuation of that
http://home.tiac.net/~cri/1996/moggin.html
A review of moggin's post-modernism FAQ
At one point in time there was a hot discussion in some usenet groups of post-modernism. The good moggin (not to be confused with his evil twin, Bruce) mailed me his post-modern FAQ and I offered to review it in return. Thus are good deeds rewarded in this sinful world.
A SHORT NOTE ON THE ART OF REVIEWING
There are sundry schools of reviewing. I belong to that school which holds that the purpose of the review is to examine and illuminate the work in question for the reader as distinct from expository essays in which the work is an excuse for the reviewer to display his brilliance in topics of his own choosing or to serve as a literary consumers guide or yet to display the reviewers skill at verbal pyrotechnics as he savages the work in question. I also belong to that school of writing that does not shrink from writing long sentences. Thus this review is meant neither to rate nor berate but simply to view anew. There may, however, be diversions here and there as we follow Alice down rabbit holes.
OPENING THE PACKAGE
The work in question is labelled as an FAQ, nominally answering the question "What is Post Modernism". It is composed of three parts, the assembly, a bibliography, and a conversation. An innocent might well ask upon reading it, "What the fuck is this?". As it happens "this" is a reasonable answer in a particular mode. Before examining the FAQ let us take a slight diversion to consider questions and answers.

27. Dog In Art: From Rococo To Post-Modernism
Grassroots Postmodernism Remaking the Soil of Cultures; The Modern Architectureand Design (World of art); Sourcebook of Modern Furniture; modernism Reborn Mid
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28. Glossary (M - R)
pieces that pushed the envelope of art, taste, self Postmodernism is not a theory,but a collection of that attempt to address the short-comings of modernism.
http://www.streettech.com/bcp/BCPgraf/Glossary/gloss3.html
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The Matrix
The Matrix is another term (slang) for the globally interconnecting computer network. As more and more networks are bridged together, we are ending up with one network of networks. Soon, as computers are equipped with radio modems, users will be able to access the worldnet from just about anywhere. (Gareth Branwyn) OK, Back to the Glossary List
Memes
Memes are patterns of information that behave like viruses. The science of memetics studies the replication, mutation, and carriers of memes. Many scientists consider memes to be actual living things that "ride" in the nervous systems of human beings, and hibernate in books, computer disks, etc. Examples of memes include catchy commercial jingles, the concept of money, political beliefs, and art styles. Certain memes are very susceptible to mutation, such as teenage cultural fads, while others have hit evolutionary dead-ends and hardly change from decade to decade, such as the major religions. Some memes, like fire building techniques, are beneficial to their host, while others are toxic to their host, such as the kamikaze and Jim Jones memes. Oxford zoologist Richard Dawkins coined the term meme in his 1976 book, The Selfish Gene.

29. Modernism: Bibiliography
Charles Jencks, Postmodernism The New Classicism in art and Architecture PatriciaMainardi, The Political Origins of modernism, art Journal, 45
http://witcombe.sbc.edu/modernism/bibliography.html
Christopher L. C. E. Witcombe Roots of Modernism Art for Art's Sake The End of Art
  • Bibliography This essay appeared originally in What is Art?...What is an Artist? BIBLIOGRAPHY Leone Battista Alberti, On Painting and On Sculpture, ed. and trans. Cecil Grayson, London, 1972. Art and Its Significance: An Anthology of Aesthetic Theory , ed. Stephan David Ross, Albany: State University of New York Press, 1984. Moshe Barasch, Theories of Art from Plato to Wincklemann , New York: New York University Press, 1985. Michael Baxandall, Painting and Experience in Fifteenth-Century Italy. 2nd ed., Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1992. Hans Belting, The End of the History of Art? trans. Christopher S. Wood, Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1987. Anthony Blunt, Artistic Theory in Italy 1450-1600, Oxford: Clarendon, [1940] 1956. Victor Burgin, The End of Art Theory , Atlantic Highlands, NJ: Humanities International Press, [1986] 1988. L. B. Cebik, Nonaesthetic Issues in the Philosophy of Art, New York: Edwin Mellen Press, 1995. Cennino Cennini
  • 30. Contemporary Literature (Spring 1991)
    wondered whether John Hawkes, studying his life, perhaps studies his art as well. Theaesthetic similarities between modernism and postmodernism pale into
    http://www.iath.virginia.edu/~jmu2m/contemporary.literature.32:1.html
    Practicing Post-Modernism:
    The Example of John Hawkes
    by John M. Unsworth
    Contemporary Literature 32.1 (Spring 1991)
    John Hawkes provides an excellent opportunity for such an inquiry, for several reasons. Discovered by Albert Guerard in 1947 and vigorously promoted by him in the years that followed, Hawkes was the first American "post-modern" author to gain notoriety. Writers of Hawkes's generation were, in turn, the first in this country to spend their entire creative lives in the academy: they have used that position with unprecedented success to shape and control critical reception, especially through the mechanism of the interview. At the same time, as Guerard's influence on Hawkes demonstrates, criticism can shape a writer's understanding of what is important in his or her creative work. There are two places to look for evidence of the kind of influence I am discussing: in the author's work and in representations of that work, either by the author or by the critics. In what follows, I will look at a short story by Hawkes which encodes a drama of authorial influence on critical reading, and along with it I will consider a critical essay on the story which enacts the part scripted for the reader in that drama. Thereafter, I will take a broader sampling of Hawkes's critical fortunes, with an eye not only to the migration of descriptive language from author to critic, via the interview, but also to the genesis of that language in the writing of Hawkes's earliest and most influential critic, Albert Guerard.

    31. 914 Post-modernism
    Add Link, New site, Cool site, Pick site, Keyword, TOP 10, Tree, Forum. LOCATION HOME art History 90 20thC art 914 Post-modernism. Category 0 Link 1 Hits14,
    http://www.nowart.com/linker_e/index.php?cat=2875

    32. THE ART NEWSPAPER - NEWS
    at an unprecedented conference held in Teheran at the end of April on “modernismand Postmodernism”, organised by the Museum of Contemporary art and the
    http://www.theartnewspaper.com/news/article.asp?idart=9599

    33. Modernism And Modernity In European Art
    CEU Department, History. Ilona SármányParsons Professor, CEU. modernism and Modernityin European art From the artistic Trends of the 1890's to Post-modernism.
    http://www.ceu.hu/crc/Syllabi/97-98/History/SARMANY.htm
    Course Title Modernism and Modernity in European Art Academic Year 1998 (Spring semester) Lecturer CEU Department History
    Professor, CEU
    Modernism and Modernity in European Art
    From the Artistic Trends of the 1890's to Post-Modernism
    The course is intended to give an overview of the main artistic trends from Art Nouveau/ Secession to Post-Modernism by concentrating on the changing role of the arts in society and the changing attitudes of the artists to their vocation. It will concentrate on painting, viewed in its social, cultural and national contexts, and will analyse the relationship between art and political and/or philosophical ideas. As in the Fall Trimester, changing world-views, as manifested in works of art, will be analysed from a social, political and philolsophical point of view. Together with English, French, German and Russian artistic trends, specific Central-European variations of the new styles in art will be discussed. Apart from the oral examination at the end of the course, the students will be tested on their recognition of the styles and masters featured in the lectures. Compulsory reading: E.H. Gombrich: The Story of Art. London, 1992. pp 442-475.

    34. NEW YORK SCRAPERS - POST-MODERNISM I
    floor there is a throughblock galleria as well as the Equitable (now AXA) Galleryfor art exhibitions. INTERNATIONAL STYLE I II III POST-modernism I II.
    http://www.greatgridlock.net/NYC/nyc4.html
    P O S T - M O D E R N I S M
    P A R T
    As a counter-force to the, at times, monotonous and anonymous image of the International Style, there was an interest in restoring the status of old architectural styles and combining them with the new ideas to create a more versatile visual form of easily distinguishable buildings that also give the client company a symbolic, architectural identity. In the 1990s, this Post-modernist style has been joined by the new, Deconstructivist/neo-Modernist/etc. style of thinking, with the historic references replaced by symbols of a "new machine age", so to say. Citicorp Center
    1001 Fifth Avenue

    Park Avenue Plaza

    520 Madison Avenue
    ...
    image

    THE CITICORP CENTER (153 E 53rd St.)
    and was built in 1974-1977 as the visually novel corporate headquarters for the Citicorp bank, the then-First National City Bank. The project originated from an initiative by the Lutheran church of St. Peter's (the "jazz church", where the memorial service for Louis Armstrong was held), which was interested in selling its property on the western portion of the block. First National, which had its headquarters in the 399 Park Avenue on the adjacent block right across Lexington Avenue and was in need of expansion, set to acquire properties in 1968, including the church site, which was purchased in 1970.

    35. Oxford Reference Online
    of TwentiethCentury art in art Architecture) 3. Post-modernism (90%) A term whichdescribes the reactions to the dominance of modernism in architecture and
    http://www.oxfordreference.com/pub/demo/html/politics_results.html
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    Post-Modernism
    Style or styles in architecture and the decorative arts that were a reaction to the Modern movement Modernism International Modernism , and the dogmas developed especially at the Bauhaus (From A Dictionary of Architecture
    Postmodernism
    A term that has been used in a broad and diffuse way, with reference to a wide range of cultural phenomena, to characterize a move away-beginning in about 1960-from the highbrow seriousness of modernism in favour of a more eclectic and populist... (From A Dictionary of Twentieth-Century Art
    Post-modernism
    A term which describes the reactions to the dominance of Modernism in architecture and the visual arts. (From The Concise Oxford Dictionary of Art Terms
    postmodernism
    n.

    36. ATOA Post-Modernism Panel, 1980
    going on. Audience I gather you're saying postmodernism says anythingcan be art. But I thought that was modernism. Wright I
    http://www.atoa.ws/2-29-80.htm
    ATOA Transcription Archive
    Post-Modernists Just Wanna Have Fun
    "Post-Modernism"
    Moderator: Peter "Blackhawk" von Brandenburg
    Panelists: Edit deAk, Glenn O'Brien,
    David Salle, Tim Wright
    Artists Talk On Art, NYC; February 29, 1980
    The moderator introduced himself and immediately set the tone of the evening: Peter "Blackhawk" von Brandenburg: Post-modernism is almost impossible to talk about and I must have been out of my mind when I suggested this panel. . . . The only hard and fast technical use of the word is in architecture, but post-modern architecture is about the farthest thing from what we're talking about. Four or five years ago something happened, first in the music world and then starting to turn up in art. One term for it is New Wave, but not what you think of now for New Wave, not punk rock, or anything like that, but the sets of conditions that gave New Wave the style it has, had and will have three years from now. Sets of criteria, assumptions, attitudes, poses, stances, perspectives. These are part of a system, and accessible to an artist working in a variety of media in art, painting, music, film not New Image painting or polystylism, which are expressions of symptoms. . . . Ever since World War II there have been youth movements in this country in which a group of people with an indigenous style or culture discover the media structure which informs them. And likewise the media structure discovers them. As soon as the media find out there is something going on, they appropriate it a style, its attitudes, its vocabulary and so co-opt it, domesticate it. This happens time and time again, because the media doesn't invent anything itself.

    37. Art Vs. Artsy-Fartsy - The Decline Of Modernism
    art had not died, but modernism, and especially Postmodernism, and whatever it wasthat followed Post-modernism, had definitely died, leaving what remained of
    http://www.robertwittig.com/paper50.html
    Art vs. Artsy-Fartsy - The Decline of Modernism
    6:24 AM 10/27/2002 Three years ago, at the end of the second millennium, the fine visual arts of Western civilisation, as represented by the powers that were, in the fine arts community at that time, had virtually lost all credibility with the vast majority of the general public. Art had not died, but modernism, and especially Post-Modernism, and whatever it was that followed Post-Modernism, had definitely died, leaving what remained of its following clinging to it, as to a bloated corpse. If Modern Art were a living creature, I would say that it had died of dissipation... as a consequence of its excesses, and unhealthy appetites. The galleries and MoMA's (Museums of Modern Art)... temples dedicated to the worship of the dead 'official art' still stood, and still stand today, but the 'action', and the passion, and the real work being done in the fine visual arts had by then, for all practical purposes, deserted the gallery scene. 'Deserted' is actually incorrect... most of the real work that is being done in the fine visual arts today was never a part of the gallery scene to begin with. No painter begins his or her career having gallery representation. One begins painting, or attends a school where one is allegedly taught how to paint, and then at some point down the road, when one's skill level reaches a certain threshold, or talent is presumably recognised, one then might expect to find an art dealer who would be interested in representing one's work, and hopefully selling the painter's work for enough money to provide a livelihood for both the painter, and the dealer, while also helping the painter to advance their career, in various ways.

    38. Test5.htm
    G. Key Cultural Terms Late modernism, Postmodernism, Abstract Expressionism, assemblageart, Pop art, Neorealism, Neoexpressionism, installation art, video art
    http://www.etsu.edu/philos/classes/rk/studyguides/test5.htm
    Study Guide for Test 5: Chapters 20-21 Chapter 20: The Zenith of Modernism (= "High Modernism") I. High Modernism
    A. Dada
    1. Duchamp: LHOOQ Fountain
    2. Man Ray: The Gift
    3. Hugo Ball: "Karawane" ("Caravan") B. Surrealism
    1. Dali: The Persistence of Memory
    2. Freida Kahlo: Self-Portraits C. Painting
    1. Picasso: Guernica
    2. Mondrian: Broadway Boogie Woogie D. Sculpture
    1. Alexander Calder: Small Spider and kinetic sculpture E. Architecture
    F. Literature 1. The Novel a. James Joyce: Ulysses 2. Poetry G. Music 1. Arnold Schoenberg 2. Louis Armstrong and jazz a. Improvisation b. Scat Singing H. Key Cultural Terms mass culture, stream-of-consciousness, Suprematism, Dada, Surrealsim, International style, serial music, twelve-tone scale Chapter 21: Late Modernism and Post-Modernism I. Late Modernism A. Abstract Expressionism 1. Jackson Pollock:

    39. Common Readers' Bookshop (Books On Modernism/Postmodernism)
    Dog in art From Rococo to Postmodernism; Robert Rosenblum; Hardcover; $26.96.Dora Marsden and Early modernism Gender Individualism, Science (Studies in
    http://orlando.jp.org/CRB/modbook.html
    Books on Modernism/Postmodernism
    Common Readers' Bookshop Click on title for more details. Books are in alphabetical order by title without any particular category. Use your brouser's FIND function to search by author or keywords. After the Great Divide : Modernism, Mass Culture, Postmodernism (Theories of Representation and Difference) ; Andreas Huyssen; Paperback; $10.75 Afterwords : Hellenism, Modernism, and the Myth of Decadence ; Louis A., Jr Ruprecht; Paperback; $21.95 American Expatriate Writing and the Paris Moment : Modernism and Place (Modernist Studies) ; Donald Pizer; Hardcover; $31.25 American Poetry : The Modernist Ideal (Insights) ; Clive Bloom, Brian Docherty; Hardcover; $35.00 The Anti-Aesthetic : Essays on Postmodern Culture ; Hal Foster; Paperback; $8.95 Art in Modern Culture : An Anthology of Critical Texts ; Francis Frascina, Jonathan Harris; Paperback; $17.96 Art Nouveau (The World of Art) ; Alastair Duncan; Paperback; $13.45 Art of the Western World : From Ancient Greece to Post-Modernism ; Bruce Cole, Adelheid Gealt; Paperback; $16.20 Art Since 1940 : Strategies of Being ; Jonathan Fineberg; Hardcover; $54.00

    40. Term Papers, Essays, Research Papers, Book Reports - AcaDemon
    Comparison of the Guggenheim and Metropolitan Museums of art, 2002. Architecturemodernism, Premodernism and Post-modernism, 2002.
    http://www.academon.com/lib/essay/10.html
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    Papers [1-15] of 169 :: [Page 1 of 12] :: Term paper #23768 :: Add to Order (You can always remove it later) The Effects of Pop Culture on Society
    A paper which investigates the negative aspects of popular culture on society. 1,369 words, 6 sources, $ 37.00. Click here to get a FREE summary Term paper #23627 :: Add to Order (You can always remove it later) Romanesque and Gothic Architecture
    A comparison of the styles and features of Romanesque and Gothic architecture. 2,014 words, 7 sources, $ 51.00. Click here to get a FREE summary Term paper #23391 :: Add to Order (You can always remove it later) The Architecture of the Maya
    An examination of the architecture of the Maya and their great contribution to world architecture. 2,888 words, 6 sources, $ 68.00. Click here to get a FREE summary Term paper #23266 :: Add to Order (You can always remove it later) The Arch
    A discussion of the architecure of the arch. 610 words, 2 sources, $ 19.00. Click here to get a FREE summary Term paper #23232 :: Add to Order (You can always remove it later) Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris
    Examining the history of the Cathedral of Notre Dame de Paris and what impact Victor Hugo's book "The Hunchback of Notre Dame" had on its revival.

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