Search for dissertations about: "adorno"
Showing result 1 - 5 of 10 swedish dissertations containing the word adorno.
-
1. Development of Encapsulated UN-UO₂ Accident Tolerant Fuel
Abstract : Accident tolerant fuels (ATFs) are designed to endure a severe accident in the reactor core longer than the standard UO2-Zr alloy systems used in light water reactors (LWRs). Composite fuels such as UN-UO2 are being considered as an ATF concept to address the lower oxidation resistance of the UN fuel from a safety perspective for use in LWRs, whilst improving the in-reactor behaviour of the UO2 fuel. READ MORE
-
2. Engineered microstructure composites as means of improving the oxidation resistance of uranium nitride
Abstract : Owing to its high uranium density and good thermophysical properties,uranium nitride (UN) fuel has been considered as a potential Accident TolerantFuel (ATF) candidate for use in Light Water Reactors (LWRs). However,the main disadvantage of UN is its low oxidation resistance in water/steamcontaining atmospheres at the operating temperatures of LWRs. READ MORE
-
3. Avhandling i litteraturvetenskap: Adorno, Deleuze och litteraturens möjligheter : Dissertation in Comparative Literature: Adorno, Deleuze and the Possibilities of Literature
Abstract : -.... READ MORE
-
4. Shock and Naturalization : An Inquiry into the Perception of Modernity
Abstract : In sociology shock is often seen as emblematic of modernity. However, while Benjamin and Simmel famously portray the big city crowd - and by extension modernity itself - as an arena of shock, shock sensations are notable for their absence in depictions of the crowd as well as of modernity as a whole in much contemporary literature. READ MORE
-
5. Between Colonialism and Nationalism : Art, History, and Politics in James Joyce’s Ulysses
Abstract : Through a thorough analysis of all eighteen episodes of Ulysses, this study advances a dialectical reading of Ireland’s pre-revolutionary imagination as it unfolds in James Joyce’s novel. By tracing Joyce’s engagements with British colonialism, national romanticism and the Celtic Revival, this study views Joyce’s modernist project as a comprehensive literary response to Ireland’s changing aesthetic sensibilities, political fortunes, and social concerns. READ MORE