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PIRE: New NSF Program for International Collaboration |
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bridges vol. 11, September 2006 / Noteworthy Information
The US National Science Foundation (NSF) is offering a new program entitled Partnerships for International Research and Education (PIRE). US scientists and engineers are invited to establish innovative models for international collaborative research and education. PIRE awards will enable US institutions to develop long-term, collaborative research and education programs with international partners.
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Two Conferences on the Future of Energy in Vienna |
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bridges vol. 11, September 2006 / Noteworthy Information
Securing an adequate and sustainable energy supply is one of the key challenges for industrialized nations in the 21st century. The demand-driven price rises in fossil fuels recently seen by the world economy are likely to persist and require strategies such as increasing energy efficiency and the use of alternative sources of energy. As part of ongoing efforts in Austria, the Federal Ministry for Transport, Innovation and Technology has launched the strategic long-run initiative, Energie 2050 (Energy 2050). Its aim is to develop a shared assessment of the current situation as well as the strengthening of relevant R&D and the evolution of a strategy for technological innovation.
Link to Energie 2050 (in German): http://www.e2050.at
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Call for Papers: Sexuality, Eroticism, and Gender in Austrian Literature and Culture |
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bridges vol. 11, September 2006 / Noteworthy Information
Annual Conference of the Modern Austrian Literature and Culture Association,
April 13-15, 2007, University of Alberta, Edmonton, Canada
In the early 20th century, Austria and her metropolis Vienna were a major hub of artistic and cultural activity in Central Europe, where also a diversity of influential discourses on sexuality, eroticism, and gender contended and flourished. This is evident in the portrayal of problematic sexual relationships in early Austrian modernism, e.g., in the literary works of Arthur Schnitzler and Peter Altenberg, Karl Kraus's Sittlichkeit und Kriminalität or Otto Weininger's Geschlecht und Charakter, in the popular novel of the time (Josefine Mutzenbacher, Hugo Bettauer), in the beginnings of academic sexology (Sigmund Freud, Friedrich Salomon Krauss, and others), in the activities of Rosa Mayreder and the early women's movement, in the eroticism of the art works of Gustav Klimt, Egon Schiele, and Alfred Kubin, or in photography. Early stages of this interest in sexuality as a cultural topic are already noticeable in the second half of the 19th century - for example in the works of Leopold von Sacher-Masoch or Hans Makart - as they were preceded by the erotic culture of Josephinism in the late 18th century.
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