Search results for "Second Industrial Revolution"

showing 3 items of 3 documents

The Paper Industry in Germany, 1800–2000

2012

Germany is the biggest paper exporter in the world, the biggest paper producer in Europe and the fourth biggest producer in the world. It is also the biggest market in Europe and a major export market for European pulp producers. However, only three German pulp and paper companies made it to the top 100 list of the industry in 2010 and none made it into the top 50 (PPI 2011). This article describes the development of the German industry from the beginning of the nineteenth century to the present in order to explain the factors contributing to this unusual state of affairs in a country which, during the second Industrial Revolution, created major players in the new global oligopolies in chem…

GermanOligopolyGerman industrybusiness.industryFederal republiclanguageSecond Industrial RevolutionPublic policyState of affairsInternational tradebusinessDomestic marketlanguage.human_language
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The Artistic Commitment of Kenyon Cox: An American Neoclassical Artist

2016

At the end of the nineteenth century, the United States had undergone deep transformations. The second Industrial Revolution had created huge amounts of new wealth and power. This led to an alteration of the urban social fabric and to a repositioning of the country on the international scene.Since the 1870s, the American Renaissance had been a vehicle for the diffusion of new values and new concepts. As a broad neoclassical movement in the arts, it was committed to a rewriting of the country’s national past.At the time, Kenyon Cox (1856-1919) distinguished himself as one of the major artists of the movement, but also as one of its most influential critics and theorists. Cox developed theori…

Historymedia_common.quotation_subjectSecond Industrial Revolutionclassicismevolution(ism)The artsVisual arts[SHS]Humanities and Social SciencesPower (social and political)anti-modernisme[ SHS ] Humanities and Social Sciencesévolutionnismelcsh:Social sciences (General)évolutionclassicismeComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUSmedia_commonEnthusiasmPaintinglcsh:English languageKenyon CoxThe RenaissanceSpanish Civil WarCox - Classicism - FormalismKenyon Cox + Neoclassicismantimodernismlcsh:H1-99[SHS] Humanities and Social Scienceslcsh:PE1-3729Classicism
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Monográfico. Cine: Arte e industria. [DOI:10.37785/nw.v4n2.a6]

2020

En 1895, en plena segunda revolución industrial, el cine emprendió su andadura con la patente del “cine- matógrafo” de los hermanos Lumière, un ingenio que, gracias a un procedimiento mecánico, permitía no solo la captación de imágenes “reales” –como lo hiciera en su momento la fotografía, pero esta vez añadiéndoles movimiento– sino también la proyección de esa continuidad de imágenes impresionadas. No cabe la menor duda de que con el objeto nació una industria, item est, una actividad lucrativa que explotaba la novedosa invención técnica con el fin de producir bienes comerciables que ofertar a la ociosa sociedad burguesa de finales del s. XIX y principios del s. XX. Rápid…

business.industrymedia_common.quotation_subjectPhotographySecond Industrial RevolutionObject (philosophy)EntertainmentMovie theaterGlobalizationIngenuityPolitical scienceEconomic historyBourgeoisiebusinessmedia_commonÑawi
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