- Directoire style (art)
Directoire style, Neoclassical style of dress, furniture, and ornament popular in France during the period of the Directory (1795–99). Dress for men, mixing ancient and contemporary elements, featured trousers and high boots, vests, long, open coats, and top hats. Women dressed in chemises that had
- Director (British ship)
William Bligh: …he was captain of the Director, his crew took part in the general mutiny of the fleet at the Nore (in the Thames estuary) in 1797. In 1805 he was court-martialed, but acquitted, for abusive language. In 1808, while governor of New South Wales, his bad relations with the New…
- director of central intelligence (United States government official)
intelligence: The United States: The director of central intelligence (DCI) plays two distinct roles as both head of the CIA and a leading adviser to the president on intelligence matters relating to national security. The powers vested in the office of the DCI have increased over the years.
- director of national intelligence (United States government official)
intelligence: The United States: The post of director of national intelligence subsequently was established to coordinate the activities of the various intelligence agencies. The director also served as the president’s chief adviser on intelligence.
- Directorate (French history)
Directory, the French Revolutionary government set up by the Constitution of the Year III, which lasted four years, from November 1795 to November 1799. It included a bicameral legislature known as the Corps Législatif. The lower house, or Council of Five Hundred (Conseil de Cinq-Cents), consisted
- Directorate of State Security (police organization, Albania)
Albania: The Stalinist state: …State Security, known as the Sigurimi. To eliminate dissent, the government periodically resorted to purges, in which opponents were subjected to public criticism, dismissed from their jobs, imprisoned in forced-labour camps, or executed. Travel abroad was forbidden to all but those on official business. In 1967 the religious establishment, which…
- Directorate of Territorial Security (French intelligence agency)
intelligence: France: The DST (Directorate of Territorial Security), a third important member of the French intelligence system, is responsible for internal security, playing a role similar to that of the American FBI. It is controlled by the Ministry of the Interior.
- Directorium Generale Uranometricum (work by Cavalieri)
Bonaventura Cavalieri: …in Italy through his book Directorium Generale Uranometricum (1632; “A General Directory of Uranometry”). His other works include Lo specchio ustorio ouero trattato delle settioni coniche (1632; “The Burning Glass; or, A Treatise on Conic Sections”) and Trigonometria plana et sphaerica, linearis et logarithmica (1643; “Plane, Spherical, Linear, and Logarithmic…
- Directorium humanae vitae (work by John of Capua)
Judaism: Jewish contributions to diffusion of folktales: …12th century, John of Capua’s Directorium humanae vitae (“Guide for Human Life”), one of the most celebrated repositories of moralistic tales (exempla) used by Christian preachers, was developed from this Hebrew translation. So too the famous Senbād-nāmeh (“Fables of Sinbad”)—one of the sources, incidentally, of Boccaccio’s Decameron—was rendered from Arabic…
- Directorium inquisitorium (work by Eymeric)
Nicholas Eymeric: Directorium inquisitorium, his only extensive work, was compiled in 1376 as a guide for inquisitors and was later printed (1503) and reissued many times. He returned to the Gerona monastery in 1397.
- Directors Guild of America (American organization)
Martha Coolidge: …first female president of the Directors Guild of America.
- directors of the Federal Bureau of Investigation
Since its inception in 1908 the U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) has had fewer than 15 directors. This is largely a result of the long tenure of J. Edgar Hoover, who served more than 46 years as the agency’s director starting in 1924. Legislation enacted in 1968, however, empowered the
- directors, board of (business)
chief executive officer: …the general consent of a board of directors, if there is one) and holds a number of important responsibilities, including:
- Directory (French history)
Directory, the French Revolutionary government set up by the Constitution of the Year III, which lasted four years, from November 1795 to November 1799. It included a bicameral legislature known as the Corps Législatif. The lower house, or Council of Five Hundred (Conseil de Cinq-Cents), consisted
- Directory (Ukrainian ruling body)
Ukraine: World War I and the struggle for independence: …Ukrainian National Union formed the Directory of the Ukrainian National Republic to prepare for his overthrow. In a bid for the support of the Allied powers, Skoropadsky announced his intention to join in federation with a future non-Bolshevik Russia, triggering an uprising. On December 14 the hetman abdicated, and the…
- directrix (mathematics)
cone: …some closed plane curve (the directrix), along which the line always glides. In a right circular cone, the directrix is a circle, and the cone is a surface of revolution. The axis of this cone is a line through the vertex and the centre of the circle, the line being…
- DirecTV (broadcasting)
Hughes Electronics Corporation: In 1994 Hughes launched DirecTV, a direct-broadcast digital television distribution system in which programming was beamed via satellite to a home-installed, platter-sized dish antenna and set-top box. By the end of 1999, DirecTV boasted 7.8 million subscribers and was one of the most successful consumer electronic products in the…
- DirectX
DirectX, a set of APIs (application programming interfaces) designed to handle multimedia tasks on Microsoft Corporation’s Windows OS (operating system). Developed in 1995, DirectX represented Microsoft’s effort to make Windows a more game-friendly platform. In the early 1990s, game designers
- Dirge Over This Dry and Cold Spring (work by Wivallius)
Lars Wivallius: …och kalla vår” [1642; “Dirge over This Dry and Cold Spring”], in which the poet laments the season that he encountered upon his release from Kajaneborg).
- Dirghagama (Buddhist literature)
Sutta Pitaka: Digha Nikaya (“Long Collection”; Sanskrit Dirghagama), 34 long suttas including doctrinal expositions, legends, and moral rules. The first, the Brahmajala Sutta (“Discourse on the Divine Net”), renowned and much quoted, deals with fundamental Buddhist doctrines and with rival philosophies and tells much about everyday life…
- dirham (coin)
coin: Islamic coins of the West and of western Asia and Central Asia: …of the silver coin (dirham, from the name of the Sāsānian coin, which in its turn was derived from Greek drachma) was reduced to 2.92 grams, but it retained in its thin material and style some features of its Sāsānian predecessor; the name of the copper change, fals, comes…
- Diriamba (Nicaragua)
Diriamba, city, southwestern Nicaragua. It lies in the Diriamba Highlands at an elevation of 1,891 feet (576 m). Diriamba is a major commercial and manufacturing centre; its hinterland is known primarily for its coffee, but lumbering is also significant. Limestone quarries and saltworks are located
- Dirichlet box principle (logic)
metalogic: Ultrafilters, ultraproducts, and ultrapowers: …in model theory include the pigeonhole principles, of which the basic principle is that, if a set of large cardinality is partitioned into a small number of classes, some one class will have large cardinality. Those elements of the set that lie in the same class cannot be distinguished by…
- Dirichlet drawer principle (logic)
metalogic: Ultrafilters, ultraproducts, and ultrapowers: …in model theory include the pigeonhole principles, of which the basic principle is that, if a set of large cardinality is partitioned into a small number of classes, some one class will have large cardinality. Those elements of the set that lie in the same class cannot be distinguished by…
- Dirichlet kernel (mathematics)
kernel: …in mathematics, such as the Dirichlet kernel and Fejér’s kernel, are concerned with Fourier series. See integral transform.
- Dirichlet problem (mathematics)
Dirichlet problem, in mathematics, the problem of formulating and solving certain partial differential equations that arise in studies of the flow of heat, electricity, and fluids. Initially, the problem was to determine the equilibrium temperature distribution on a disk from measurements taken
- Dirichlet series (mathematics)
Harald August Bohr: …was mainly concerned with the Dirichlet series, a series introduced by Peter Dirichlet of Germany in the application of analysis to the theory of numbers. Later, in collaboration with Edmund Landau of Germany, Bohr concentrated his efforts on a study of the Riemann zeta function, a function of fundamental importance…
- Dirichlet’s test (mathematics)
Dirichlet’s test, in analysis (a branch of mathematics), a test for determining if an infinite series converges to some finite value. The test was devised by the 19th-century German mathematician Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet. Let Σan be an infinite series such that its partial sums sn = a1 + a2
- Dirichlet’s theorem (mathematics)
Dirichlet’s theorem, statement that there are infinitely many prime numbers contained in the collection of all numbers of the form na + b, in which the constants a and b are integers that have no common divisors except the number 1 (in which case the pair are known as being relatively prime) and
- Dirichlet, Peter Gustav Lejeune (German mathematician)
Peter Gustav Lejeune Dirichlet was a German mathematician who made valuable contributions to number theory, analysis, and mechanics. He taught at the universities of Breslau (1827) and Berlin (1828–55) and in 1855 succeeded Carl Friedrich Gauss at the University of Göttingen. Dirichlet made notable
- Dirie, Waris (Somalian model, author, and activist)
Waris Dirie is a Somalian fashion model, author, and women’s rights activist known for her efforts to eliminate female genital mutilation (FGM), also called female circumcision. Dirie was one of 12 children born into a large nomadic family living near Somalia’s border with Ethiopia. Much of Dirie’s
- dirigible (aircraft)
airship, a self-propelled lighter-than-air craft. Three main types of airships, or dirigibles (from French diriger, “to steer”), have been built: nonrigids (blimps), semirigids, and rigids. All three types have four principal parts: a cigar-shaped bag, or balloon, that is filled with a
- dirigible balloon (aircraft)
airship, a self-propelled lighter-than-air craft. Three main types of airships, or dirigibles (from French diriger, “to steer”), have been built: nonrigids (blimps), semirigids, and rigids. All three types have four principal parts: a cigar-shaped bag, or balloon, that is filled with a
- dirigisme (economics)
dirigisme, an approach to economic development emphasizing the positive role of state intervention. The term dirigisme is derived from the French word diriger (“to direct”), which signifies the control of economic activity by the state. Preventing market failure was the basic rationale of this
- Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency (novel by Adams)
Douglas Adams: …satirized the detective-story genre with Dirk Gently’s Holistic Detective Agency (1987) and The Long Dark Tea-Time of the Soul (1988). Other works include The Meaning of Liff (with John Lloyd; 1983), The Utterly Utterly Merry Comic Relief Christmas Book (coeditor, with Peter Fincham; 1986), and Last Chance to See… (with…
- Dirk Hartog Formation (geological formation, Australia)
Silurian Period: Evaporites: …and anhydrite occur in the Dirk Hartog Formation in the Carnarvon Basin; more extensive halite or anhydrite beds or those of both have been discovered in comparable formations from the Canning and Bonaparte Gulf basins.
- Dirk Hartog Island (island, Western Australia, Australia)
Dirk Hartog Island, Australian island in the Indian Ocean, just north of Edel Land Peninsula, Western Australia. Naturaliste Channel passes north to enter Denham Sound (which washes the eastern shore), and Shark Bay lies to the northeast. The island was named after a Dutch navigator who arrived in
- Dirk I (count of Holland)
Holland: …of the house of Holland, Dirk I (who had received the original feudal land from the Carolingian Charles III the Simple in 922) continued until 1299—a line of 14 descendants. At that time John I of Avesnes, count of Hainaut and a relative of John I, the last of the…
- Dirk III (count of Holland)
Holland: Dirk III, the third in the line of the early counts of Holland, conquered much of what is now Zuid-Holland from the bishops of Utrecht; he defeated their forces and an imperial army in 1018 at Vlaardingen, a fortification that he had erected to levy…
- Dirk IV (count of Holland)
Vlaardingen: …victory was won nearby when Dirk IV defeated Emperor Henry III in 1037; the victories of Count William V (1351) near the town established the Bavarian line of the house of Holland. Vlaardingen developed in the 20th century into one of the largest seaports of the Netherlands. The completion in…
- Dirk van den Elzas (count of Flanders)
Thierry was the count of Flanders (1128–68), son of Thierry II, duke of Upper Lorraine, and Gertrude, daughter of Robert I the Frisian, count of Flanders. He contested the county of Flanders with William Clito on the death of Charles the Good in 1127. He was recognized by Ghent, Bruges, and Ypres
- Dirks, Rudolph (American cartoonist)
Rudolph Dirks was a U.S. cartoonist who created the comic strip “Katzenjammer Kids.” At the age of 7 Dirks moved with his family to Chicago, and at 17 he went to New York City, where he worked as staff artist for William Randolph Hearst’s New York Journal. There, inspired by Wilhelm Busch’s Max und
- Dirksen, Everett McKinley (United States senator)
Everett McKinley Dirksen was a U.S. politician and leader of the Senate Republicans during the administrations of John F. Kennedy and Lyndon B. Johnson. Dirksen attended the University of Minnesota, left before graduating to serve in World War I, and, after his discharge, returned to Pekin, where
- Dirnt, Mike (American musician)
Green Day: ), Mike Dirnt (byname of Michael Ryan Pritchard, b. May 4, 1972, Berkeley), and Tré Cool (byname of Frank Edwin Wright III, b. December 9, 1972, Willits, California). Other members have included Al Sobrante (byname of John Kiffmeyer).
- Dirofilaria immitis (nematode)
filariasis: In the form of heartworm disease, it may be fatal to dogs and other mammals.
- dirt bike (bicycle)
bicycle: Basic types: BMX (bicycle motocross) bikes appeared in the early 1970s as an offshoot of motocross. They were designed for racing on dirt tracks replete with tight turns, berms, and jumps. BMX bikes are durable, with 20-inch- (51-cm-) diameter wheels mounted on a small frame. There is…
- Dirt Music (novel by Winton)
Australian literature: Literature in the 21st century: … added the highly regarded novels Dirt Music (2001) and Breath (2009) to his oeuvre.
- dirtband ogive (glaciology)
glacier: Surface features: Dirtband ogives also may occur below icefalls; these are caused by seasonal differences in the amount of dust or by snow trapped in the icefall. In plan view, the ogives are invariably distorted into arcs or curves convex downglacier; hence the name ogive.
- dirty bomb (weapon)
dirty bomb, explosive device designed to scatter radioactive material, hence the adjective dirty. Unlike an atomic bomb’s explosive power, which comes from a nuclear chain reaction, the explosive energy of the dirty bomb comes from ordinary conventional explosives such as dynamite or TNT. When the
- Dirty Dancing (film by Ardolino [1987])
Joel Grey: …role as Baby Houseman in Dirty Dancing (1987).
- Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (film by Ferland [2004])
Patrick Swayze: …queen; Donnie Darko (2001); and Dirty Dancing: Havana Nights (2004).
- Dirty Dozen, The (film by Aldrich [1967])
The Dirty Dozen, British-American war film, released in 1967, that caused controversy with its extreme violence but became one of the highest-grossing movies of the decade, noted for its taut action, dark humour, and stellar cast. During World War II, U.S. Major Reisman (played by Lee Marvin) is
- Dirty Grandpa (film by Mazer [2016])
Robert De Niro: Comedies and later work: …had the title role in Dirty Grandpa (2016). His other credits from 2016 included Hands of Stone, in which he portrayed the trainer of boxer Roberto Durán. The following year he starred in the HBO TV movie The Wizard of Lies, playing Bernie Madoff, a hedge-fund investor who operated the…
- Dirty Harry (film by Siegel [1971])
Clint Eastwood: Early life and career: Their best-known collaboration was Dirty Harry (1971), in which Eastwood first portrayed the ruthlessly effective neo-noir police inspector Harry Callahan. The film proved to be one of Eastwood’s most successful, spawning four sequels and establishing the no-nonsense character Dirty Harry—known for such catchphrases as “Go ahead, make my day”—as…
- Dirty House (building, London, England, United Kingdom)
David Adjaye: Elektra House and Dirty House (2000 and 2002, respectively, both in London)—two of the most well-known examples of the private residences he designed—had dark exteriors, were stark and modernistic, and provided the perfect milieu for the artists who lived in them. His Idea Stores were light, airy spaces…
- Dirty Money (film by Arcand [1972])
Denys Arcand: …with La Maudite Galette (Dirty Money) in 1972. He directed the film Le Crime d’Ovide Plouffe (Murder in the Family) in 1984 and the television miniseries based on it that followed the next year.
- Dirty Picture, The (film by Luthria [2011])
Vidya Balan: …win) with her performance in The Dirty Picture (2011), a biopic of “soft-porn” actress Silk Smitha. Balan then portrayed a pregnant woman searching for her missing husband in Kahaani (2012; Story), for which she garnered her third Filmfare best actress award, and a woman who defies her conventional family to…
- dirty protest
Bobby Sands: …known as the “blanket” and “dirty” protests, wherein protesting prisoners would only wear a blanket instead of prison uniforms and refused to wash.
- Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (film by Oz [1988])
Michael Caine: …Without a Clue (1988), and Dirty Rotten Scoundrels (1988). By the end of the 20th century, Caine had appeared in more than 100 films. He won his second best-supporting-actor Oscar for The Cider House Rules (1999) and was nominated as best actor for his performance as a conflicted British journalist…
- dirty sandstone (sedimentary rock)
wacke, sedimentary rock composed of sand-sized grains (0.063–2 mm [0.0025–0.078 inch]) with a fine-grained clay matrix. The sand-sized grains are frequently composed of rock fragments of wide-ranging mineralogies (e.g., those consisting of pyroxenes, amphiboles, feldspars, and quartz). The grains
- dirty snowball model (astronomy)
comet: The modern era: …popularly known as the “dirty snowball.”
- Dirty South (school of hip-hop)
hip-hop: American hip-hop in the 21st century: …the sounds of the “Dirty South” to the mainstream.
- Dirty War (Argentine history)
Dirty War, infamous campaign waged from 1976 to 1983 by Argentina’s military dictatorship against suspected left-wing political opponents. It is estimated that between 10,000 and 30,000 citizens were killed; many of them were “disappeared”—seized by the authorities and never heard from again. On
- Dirʿīyah, Al- (Saudi Arabia)
history of Arabia: Religious reform: …in Najd, he moved to Al-Dirʿiyyah, a village that had never been ruled by the Ottomans, and obtained the protection and the adherence of its chief, Muhammad ibn Saud.
- Dirʿiyyah, Battle of Al- (Arabia [1818])
Battle of Al-Dirʿiyyah, (1818), major defeat dealt the Wahhābīs, Islamic reformers in the Najd region of central Arabia, by the forces of the Egyptian ruler Muḥammad ʿAlī Pasha. The Wahhābī empire was destroyed, and the Saud dynasty that created it was virtually wiped out. Wahhābī attacks on
- Dis Pater (Roman god)
Dis Pater, (Latin: Rich Father), in Roman religion, god of the infernal regions, the equivalent of the Greek Hades (q.v.), or Pluto (Rich One). Also known to the Romans as Orcus, he was believed to be the brother of Jupiter and was greatly feared. His wife, Proserpina (a Roman corruption of the
- Disa (plant genus)
Disa, genus of about 175 species of terrestrial orchids (family Orchidaceae). They grow in marshes and grasslands in southeastern Africa, in Madagascar, and on nearby islands. Red disa (Disa uniflora), a South African species, bears pink and scarlet flowers and is cultivated as an ornamental. Most
- Disa uniflora (plant)
Disa: Red disa (Disa uniflora), a South African species, bears pink and scarlet flowers and is cultivated as an ornamental.
- disability (health condition)
biological determinism: Influence on disability: Social attitudes about what constitutes a disability, and how economic and social resources are to be allocated to deal with disabilities, change over time. In hard economic times the disabled are often written off as “too expensive,” a trend often justified on the basis…
- disability aesthetics
disability art: …artistic experimentations are known as disability aesthetics. Such aesthetics can also include an aestheticizing of assistive devices—such as canes, guide dogs, and interpreters—into the artwork itself. That inclusion runs counter to the tendency to consider such devices “add-ons” that are not part of the artwork itself.
- disability art
disability art, any creative work that explores a disability experience, either in content or in form. Although the term disability art is sometimes restricted to artwork that is intended primarily for audiences with disabilities, many disabled artists create work that is intended for audiences
- disability culture
disability culture, the sum total of behaviours, beliefs, ways of living, and material artifacts that are unique to persons affected by disability. Particular definitions of culture take many different forms and are context-bound (dependent on the cultural and geographic context in which they are
- disability income insurance
insurance: Types of policies: Disability income coverage provides periodic payments when the insured is unable to work as a result of accident or illness. There is normally a waiting period before the payments begin. Definitions of disability vary considerably. A strict definition of disability requires that one be unable…
- disability income rider
insurance: Special riders: Under the disability income rider, should the insured become totally and permanently disabled, a monthly income will be paid. Under the double indemnity rider, if death occurs through accident, the insurance payable is double the face amount.
- disability management
disability management, discipline concerned with reducing the impact of disability on individuals and employers. The term disability management commonly is used in three areas: work and work discrimination, symptom and condition management, and resource management. Within the area of work,
- disability studies
disability studies, an interdisciplinary area of study based in the humanities and social sciences that views disability in the context of culture, society, and politics rather than through the lens of medicine or psychology. In the latter disciplines, “disability” is typically viewed as a distance
- Disability Studies, Society for (international organization)
disability studies: Inspired by UPIAS, the Society for Disability Studies (SDS; originally Section for the Study of Chronic Illness, Impairment, and Disability [SSCIID]) was started in 1982 by a group of American academics led by activist and writer Irving Zola. Michael Oliver, a disabled sociologist, helped to push the movement into…
- disability survey
disability survey, collection of information about disability by using survey methods. Although disability statistics can be produced from census data or administrative records, disability surveys are relatively inexpensive, unobtrusive, and accurate. The statistics gathered from disability surveys
- disability-adjusted life year
alcohol consumption: Individual and social effects: …pressure than from alcoholism, the disability-adjusted life years (a technical measure for computing the loss of healthy life as the result of disability) resulting from alcohol abuse nearly equals that from high blood pressure and smoking combined. Alcoholics and problem drinkers also undoubtedly contribute to the deterioration of the mental…
- disabled (human condition)
Ovide Decroly: …children, including those with physical disabilities. Through his work as a physician, Decroly became involved in a school for disabled children and consequently became interested in education. One outcome of this interest was his establishment in 1901 of the Institute for Abnormal Children in Uccle, Belg. Decroly credited the school’s…
- Disabled in Action (American organization)
Judith Heumann: …cofounded the political action group Disabled in Action, which led a protest that shut down rush-hour traffic in Manhattan to protest U.S. Pres. Richard Nixon’s veto of the Rehabilitation Act of 1972. Heumann then enrolled in the public health program at the University of California at Berkeley (Master of Public…
- disaccharide (biochemistry)
disaccharide, any substance that is composed of two molecules of simple sugars (monosaccharides) linked to each other. Disaccharides are crystalline water-soluble compounds. The monosaccharides within them are linked by a glycosidic bond (or glycosidic linkage), the position of which may be
- Disamis (syllogistic)
history of logic: Syllogisms: Third figure: Darapti, Disamis, Datisi, Felapton,
- Disappearance of Childhood, The (work by Postman)
Neil Postman: In The Disappearance of Childhood (1982), Postman claimed that childhood is essentially a social artifact. Its origin was closely linked to the printing press and the growth of literacy, which made possible the segregation of groups into children and adults. Television, however, tends to eliminate the…
- Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby, The (films by Benson [2013-2014])
Viola Davis: …professor in the romantic drama The Disappearance of Eleanor Rigby. She then starred as a law professor in the television drama series How to Get Away with Murder (2014–20), and in 2015 she won an Emmy Award for her performance on that show. Davis assumed a supporting role in Michael…
- Disappearance of God: Five Nineteenth-Century Writers, The (work by Miller)
J. Hillis Miller: …Meredith, and Hardy (1968), and The Disappearance of God: Five Nineteenth-Century Writers (1963). He drew heavily on ideas of the absence or death of the divine. By 1970, however, he had joined the deconstructionist critics at Yale, where he often defended deconstruction against charges of nihilism. Although Miller’s literary scholarship…
- Disappearing Acts (novel by McMillan)
Terry McMillan: Literary success and readership: McMillan’s next novel, Disappearing Acts (1989), concerns two dissimilar people who begin an intimate relationship. (In 2000 it was made into a TV movie of the same name starring Wesley Snipes, Sanaa Lathan, Michael Imperioli, and Regina Hall.) Her third novel, the blockbuster Waiting to Exhale (1992), followed…
- disappearing carriage mount (military technology)
artillery: Coast guns: …major advance was a “disappearing carriage,” in which the gun was mounted at the end of two arms that were hinged to a rotating base. In the firing position, a counterweight or hydraulic press held the arms vertical, so that the gun pointed over the edge of the pit…
- disarmament (military policy)
disarmament, in international relations, any of four distinct conceptions: (1) the penal destruction or reduction of the armament of a country defeated in war (the provision under the Versailles Treaty [1919] for the disarmament of Germany and its allies is an example of this conception of
- Disarmament Commission (UN)
20th-century international relations: Arms control and defense: …balance of terror”? The UN Disarmament Commission became a tedious platform for the posturings of the superpowers, the Americans insisting on on-site inspection, the Soviets demanding “general and complete disarmament” and the elimination of foreign bases. Eisenhower hoped that Stalin’s death might help to break this deadlock. Churchill had been…
- Disaronno Originale (liquer)
amaretto: The liqueur is now called Disaronno Originale in an effort to claim its provenance over several other brands of amaretto.
- disaster (event)
disaster, any natural or human-generated calamitous event that produces great loss of human life or destruction of the natural environment, private property, or public infrastructure. A disaster may be relatively sudden, such as an earthquake or an oil spill, or it may unfold over a longer period,
- Disaster Artist, The (film by Franco [2017])
James Franco: Other work: …he directed and starred in The Disaster Artist, which recounted the filming of The Room (2003), a notoriously bad movie that became a cult favourite. For his performance, Franco received a Golden Globe Award. His later directorial efforts included The Pretenders (2018) and Zeroville (2019).
- disaster capitalism
Naomi Klein: …examined what Klein termed “disaster capitalism,” a form of extreme capitalism that advocated privatization and deregulation in the wake of war or natural catastrophe. The Shock Doctrine was adapted as a feature-length documentary film by director Michael Winterbottom in 2009.
- disaster cycle (collective behavior)
collective behaviour: Responses to disaster: A disaster-stricken community affords a prototypical situation for collective behaviour. The lives of persons are disrupted indiscriminately by a tornado, flood, or earthquake, and coping with the resulting destruction and disorder is beyond the capacity of conventional institutions. Of perhaps greatest importance, the assumption…
- disaster epidemiology
disaster epidemiology, the study of the effects of disasters on human populations, mainly by the use of data collection and statistical analyses and particularly with the aim of predicting the impacts of future disasters. Insight into how a disaster can impact the health and function of populations
- disaster film (film genre)
film: Hollywood genres: , the disaster cycle of the 1970s, which included Earthquake [1974] and The Towering Inferno [1974]), but even lasting genres go through phases of popularity. The western, for example, was well established as a genre by the 1920s. It was particularly strong in the late 1940s and…
- Disaster Movie (film by Friedberg and Seltzer [2008])
Kim Kardashian: …made her big-screen debut in Disaster Movie (2008)—and other TV appearances. She notably starred in the spin-off series Kourtney and Kim Take New York (2011–12). In 2020 Kim and other members of the family signed a production deal with the streaming service Hulu, and the following year Keeping Up with…
- disaster relief (welfare)
relief, in finance, public or private aid to persons in economic need because of natural disasters, wars, economic upheaval, chronic unemployment, or other conditions that prevent self-sufficiency. Through the 19th century, disaster relief consisted largely of emergency grants of food, clothing,
- Disasters of War, The (print series by Goya)
caricature and cartoon: Spain: …de la guerra” (1810–14, “Disasters of War”), which used the Peninsular phase of the Napoleonic Wars as a point of departure. They are closer to universality than even Callot’s similarly inspired series and are searching comments on more stages of cruelty than Hogarth covered. In them, Goya was really…