The Form Book

The Form Book
Author: Borries Schwesinger
Publsiher: Thames and Hudson
Total Pages: 332
Release: 2010-06
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: STANFORD:36105215530465

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Filling in a form may be an everyday experience, yet as an aspect of design that affects all our lives, forms are quite often overlooked. This is a handbook on form design for designers, students and anyone interested in improving client communication and information handling.

Web Form Design

Web Form Design
Author: Luke Wroblewski
Publsiher: Rosenfeld Media
Total Pages: 226
Release: 2008-05-01
Genre: Computers
ISBN: 9781933820255

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Forms make or break the most crucial online interactions: checkout (commerce), registration (community), data input (participation and sharing), and any task requiring information entry. In Web Form Design, Luke Wroblewski draws on original research, his considerable experience at Yahoo! and eBay, and the perspectives of many of the field's leading designers to show you everything you need to know about designing effective and engaging Web forms.

Forms

Forms
Author: Caroline Levine
Publsiher: Princeton University Press
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2017-01-03
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780691173436

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A radically new way of thinking about form and context in literature, politics, and beyond Forms offers a powerful new answer to one of the most pressing problems facing literary, critical, and cultural studies today—how to connect form to political, social, and historical context. Caroline Levine argues that forms organize not only works of art but also political life—and our attempts to know both art and politics. Inescapable and frequently troubling, forms shape every aspect of our experience. Yet, forms don't impose their order in any simple way. Multiple shapes, patterns, and arrangements, overlapping and colliding, generate complex and unpredictable social landscapes that challenge and unsettle conventional analytic models in literary and cultural studies. Borrowing the concept of "affordances" from design theory, this book investigates the specific ways that four major forms—wholes, rhythms, hierarchies, and networks—have structured culture, politics, and scholarly knowledge across periods, and it proposes exciting new ways of linking formalism to historicism and literature to politics. Levine rereads both formalist and antiformalist theorists, including Cleanth Brooks, Michel Foucault, Jacques Rancière, Mary Poovey, and Judith Butler, and she offers engaging accounts of a wide range of objects, from medieval convents and modern theme parks to Sophocles's Antigone and the television series The Wire. The result is a radically new way of thinking about form for the next generation and essential reading for scholars and students across the humanities who must wrestle with the problem of form and context.

The Form of the Book

The Form of the Book
Author: Jan Tschichold
Publsiher: Point Roberts, Wash. ; Vancouver, B.C. : Hartley & Marks
Total Pages: 208
Release: 1991
Genre: Architecture
ISBN: UOM:39015029157230

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Manual of Federal Practice

Manual of Federal Practice
Author: Richard A. Givens
Publsiher: Unknown
Total Pages: 135
Release: 1998
Genre: Civil procedure
ISBN: LCCN:98085324

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Bad Form

Bad Form
Author: Kent Puckett
Publsiher: Oxford University Press
Total Pages: 192
Release: 2008-11-21
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780190450311

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What--other than embarrassment--could one hope to gain from prolonged exposure to the social mistake? Why think much about what many would like simply to forget? In Bad Form: Social Mistakes and the Nineteenth-Century Novel, Kent Puckett argues that whatever its awkwardness, the social mistake-the blunder, the gaffe, the faux pas-is a figure of critical importance to the nineteenth-century novel. While offering significant new readings of Thackeray, Flaubert, Eliot, James, and others, Puckett shows how the classic realist novel achieves its coherence thanks to minor mistakes that novels both represent and make. While uncovering the nineteenth-century novel's persistent social and structural reliance on the non-catastrophic mistake-eating peas with your knife, saying the wrong thing, overdressing-Bad Form argues that the novel's once considerable cultural authority depends on what we might otherwise think of as that authority's opposite: a jittery, anxious, obsessive attention to the mistakes of others that is its own kind of bad form. Drawing on sociology, psychoanalysis, narrative theory, and the period's large literature on etiquette, Puckett demonstrates that the nineteenth-century novel relies for its form on the paradoxical force of the social mistake.

Problems of Form

Problems of Form
Author: Dirk Baecker
Publsiher: Stanford University Press
Total Pages: 266
Release: 1999
Genre: Social Science
ISBN: 0804734240

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"Thus the observer is part of the situation he or she observes. The essays in this volume use this idea to describe different social "forms" as consisting of action observed by further action."--BOOK JACKET.

Reading for Form

Reading for Form
Author: Susan J. Wolfson,Marshall Brown
Publsiher: University of Washington Press
Total Pages: 304
Release: 2016-01-12
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780295805481

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Reflecting varieties of theory and practice in both verse and prose from the Middle Ages to the twenty-first century, these essays by many of America's leading literary scholars call for a reinvigorated formalism that can enrich literary studies, open productive routes of commerce with cultural studies, and propel cultural theory out of its thematic ruts. This book reprints Modern Language Quarterly's highly acclaimed special issue Reading for Form, along with new essays by Marjorie Perloff, D. Vance Smith, and Susan Stewart, and a revised introduction by Susan Wolfson. With historical case studies and insightful explorations, Reading for Form offers invaluable material for literary critics in all specializations.