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6 result(s) for "Brain Comic books, strips, etc."
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Geomorphology and Global Environmental Change
How will global environmental change affect the landscape and our interaction with it? Apart from climate change, there are other important catalysts of landscape change, including relief, hydroclimate and runoff, sea level variations and human activity. This volume summarises the geomorphic implications of global environmental change, analysing such effects on lakes, rivers, coasts, reefs, rainforests, savannas, deserts, glacial features, and mountains. Providing a benchmark statement from the world's leading geomorphologists on the state of, and potential changes to, the environment, this book is invaluable for advanced courses on geomorphology and environmental science, and as a reference for research scientists. Interdisciplinary in scope, with a primary audience of Earth and environmental scientists, geographers, geomorphologists and ecologists, it also has a wider reach to those concerned with the social, economic and political issues raised by global environmental change, and is useful to policy makers and environmental managers.
Neurocomic
Nonfiction graphic novel explaining the physiology of the brain and describing theoretical and experimental developments that led to our present understanding.
Only What's Necessary
Drawn from the archives of the Charles M. Schulz Museum, an in-depth look at Peanuts with a \"wealth of original art\" (The New York Times).Charles M. Schulz believed that the key to cartooning was to take out the extraneous details and leave in only what's necessary. For fifty years, from October 2, 1950, to February 13, 2000, Schulz wrote and illustrated Peanuts, the single most popular and influential comic strip in the world. In all, 17,897 strips were published, making it \"arguably the longest story ever told by one human being,\" according to Robert Thompson, professor of popular culture at Syracuse University. For Only What's Necessary: Charles M. Schulz and the Art of Peanuts, renowned designer Chip Kidd was granted unprecedented access to the extraordinary archives of the Charles M. Schulz Museum and Research Center in Santa Rosa, California. Reproducing the best of the Peanuts newspaper strip, all shot from the original art by award-winning photographer Geoff Spear, Only What's Necessary also features exclusive, rare, and unpublished original art and developmental work--much of which has never been seen before.\"Glorious...equal parts museum and monument, a masterwork of curatorial rigor and an affectionate homage.\"--Brain Pickings
Your Brain on Latino Comics
Even veteran readers of Latino comic books are likely to discover new texts in Aldama's extensive account. [...] the author begins to unravel \"how a given comic book might challenge dominant social, sexual, and cultural codes of conduct\" while also being careful not to discount the importance of how comics also \"create pleasing effects for their reader-viewers' brains\" (19).