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Businesses, as with other sectors in society, are not yet taking sufficient action towards achieving sustainability. The United Nations recently agreed upon a set of Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), which if properly harnessed, provide a framework (so far lacking) for businesses to meaningfully drive transformations to sustainability. This paper proposes to operationalize the SDGs for businesses through a progressive framework for action with three discrete levels: communication, tactical, and strategic. Within the tactical and strategic levels, several innovative approaches are discussed and illustrated. The challenges of design and measurement as well as opportunities for accountability and the social side of Sustainability, together call for transdisciplinary, collective action. This paper demonstrates feasible pathways and approaches for businesses to take corporate social responsibility to the next level and utilize the SDG framework informed by sustainability science to support transformations towards the achievement of sustainability.
Phoebus 6, Number 1: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Preface” p. 7-8.
“The Time of Qianlong (1736-1795)” by Wen Fong, p. 9-16.
“The Intellectual Climate in Eighteenth-century China: Glimpses of Beijing, Suzhou, and Yangzhou in the Qianlong Period” by Frederick Mote, p. 17-55.
“The Qianlong Emperor’s Skill in the Connoisseurship of Chinese Painting” by Kohara Hironobu, p. 56-73.
“An Overview of Stylistic Development in the Qianlong Painting Academy” by She Cheng, p. 74-90.
“Document and Portrait: the Southern Tour Paintings of Kangxi and Qianlong” by Maxwell Hearn, p. 91-131.
“Tangdai: A Biographical Sketch” by Ju-hsi Chou, p. 132-140.
“For the Love of God: Castiglione at the Qing Imperial Court” by Howard Rogers, p. 141-160.
“Approaches to Painting at the Qianlong Court” by Claudia Brown, p. 163-168.
“Notes” p. 169-198.
Phoebus 6, Number 2: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Preface” p. 207.
“Figure, Fiction, and Figment in Eighteenth-century Chinese Painting” by Richard Vinograd, p. 209-227.
“Yuan Jiang: Image Maker” by Alfreda Murck, p. 228-260.
“Zheng Xie's Price List: Painting as a Source of Income in Yangzhou” by Ginger Cheng-chi Hsü, p. 261-271.
“Jin Nong: The Eccentric Painter with a Wintry Heart” by Marshall P. S. Wu, p. 272-294.
“An Overview of Li Jian’s Painting” by Christina Chu, p. 295-315.
“Eighteenth-century Foundations in Modern Chinese Painting” by Chu-tsing Li, p. 316-327.
“Rubric and Art History: The Case of the Eight Eccentrics in Yangzhou” by Ju-hsi Chou, p. 329-350.
“Notes” p. 351-379.
“Glossary” p. 381-391.
“Index” p. 393-418
Phoebus 7: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Preface” by Emily Umberger and Tom Cummins, p. 9-13.
“Synthesis and Survival: The Native Presence in Sixteenth-century Murals of New Spain” by Jeanette Favrot Peterson, p. 14-35.
“Adaptation and Accommodation: The Transformation of the Pictorial Text in Sahagun's Manuscripts” by Ellen T. Baird, p. 36-51.
“The Madonna and the Horse: Becoming Colonial in New Spain and Peru” by Tom Cummins, p. 52-83.
“Colonial Visions: Drama, Art, and Legitimation in Peru and Ecuador” by Carlos Espinoza, p. 84-106.
“Who's Naughty and Nice: Childish Behavior in the Paintings of Cuzco's Corpus Christi Procession” by Carolyn S. Dean, p. 107-126.
Phoebus 8: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Preface” by Ju-hsi Chou, p. 9-10.
“The Significance of the Nineteenth Century for Modern Chinese History” by Stephen R. Mackinnon, p. 11-17.
“Looking at Late Qing Painting with New Eyes” by Chu-Tsing Li, p. 18-37.
“Qian Du to Zhang Jing: The Artist and the Patron” by Ju-hsi Chou, p. 38-66.
“Zhou Xian's Fabulous Construct: The Thatched Cottage of Fan Lake” by Britta Erickson, p. 67-93.
“A Forgotten Celebrity: Wang Zhen (1867-1938), Businessman, Philanthropist, and Artist” by Hsing-yuan Tsao, p. 94-109.
“Satire and Situation: Images of the Artist in Late Nineteenth-Century China” by Richard Vinograd, p. 110-133.
“Painters and Publishing in Late Nineteenth-century Shanghai” by Jonathan Hay, p. 134-188.
“Calligraphy at the Close of the Chinese Empire” by Lothar Ledderose, p. 189-207.
“Glossary of Chinese Names and Terms” p. 211-219
Phoebus 9: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Preface” by J. Robert Wills, p. 9-10.
“Collecting Chinese Art” by Roy and Marilyn Papp, p. 13.
“Catalog of the Inaugural Gift from the Roy and Marilyn Papp Collection to Phoenix Art Museum” p. 15-43.
“Exhibitions From the Roy and Marilyn Papp Collection” p. 44-45.
“Additional Publications” p. 47.
“Romanization Note” p. 48.
“The Daoist Symbolism of Immortality in Shen Zhou’s ‘Watching the Mid-Autumn Moon at Bamboo Villa’” by Chun-yi Lee, p. 49-78.
“Wu Shi'en's ‘Liang Hong and Meng Guang’: A Misreading” by Xiaoping Lin, p. 79-99.
“From the Profound to the Mundane: Depictions of Lohans in Late Ming China” by Janet Baker, p. 101-116.
“Glimpses of the Duanwu Festival by Fang Xun (1736-1799): Commemorative Painting or Private Souvenir?” by Anne Kerlan-Stephens, p. 117-141.
“Pleasure and Pain” by Marion S. Lee, p. 143-165.
“From Narrative to Transformed Narrative: Visualizations of the Heavenly Maiden and the Maiden Magu” by Chen Liu, p. 167-182.
“Glossary of Chinese Names and Terms” p. 185-195
Phoebus 5: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Editor’s Note” by Anthony Gully, p. 5-6.
“Preface” by Lucinda H. Gedeon, p. 9-12.
“Hiram Power’s Bust of George Washington: The President as an Icon” by Vivien Green Fryd, p. 14-28.
“A Sky After El Greco, An Early Homage by Demuth” by Marie Timberlake, p. 29-44.
“Ben Shahn’s ‘Mine Building: A Symbol of Disaster’” by Carolyn Robbins, p. 45-60.
“Georgia O’Keeffe’s ‘Horse’s Skull on Blue’: A Dedicatory Essay” by Barbara Spies, p. 61-65.
“Eastman Johnson's Cranberry Pickers” by Joseph Lamb, p. 66-74.
“Dull Knife’s Defiance” by Maria Leone, p. 75-79.
“A Designer of Dreams: Arthur B. Davies’ ‘Dawn, Mother of Night’” by Anne Gully, p. 80-87.
“Death and Mystical Liberation in John B. Flannagan’s ‘Beginning’” by Timothy Norris, p. 88-92.
“Architecture that Speaks: Edward Hopper's Cottage, Cape Cod” by William Laubach, p. 93-95.
“Behind the Mask: Walt Kuhn’s ‘Young Clown’” by Richard Raymond, p. 96-101.
“George Elbert Burr: A Sometimes Master” by Thomas van der Meulen, p. 102-109.
“‘Parade’ in Review, an Interview with Philip C. Curtis” by Dawne Walczak, p. 110-124.
“Notes” p. 125-143.
Phoebus 4: A Journal of Art History - Table of Contents
“Contributors” p. 2.
“Preface” by Lee Anne Wilson, p. 7.
“Grave Goods of the Florida Elite” by Mallory McCane-O’Connor, p. 9-21.
“Visual Imagery and Social Change” by Lee Anne Wilson, p. 24-31.
“The Language of Dance: Communicative Dimensions of Hopi Katsina Dances” by Louis A. Heib, p. 32-41.
“WoHaw, a Kiowa Artist at Fort Marion, Florida” by Janet Catherine Berlo, p. 43-53.
“The Other Weavers: Navajo Basket Makers” by Susan Brown McGreevey, p. 54-61.
“Powhatan Copper and the Prehistoric Ceremonial Complexes of the Eastern United States” by Amy Trevelyan, p. 62-70.
“Lakota Beaded Costumes of the Early Reservation Era” by Marsha Clift Bol, p. 71-77.
“The Emergence of Crenellated Ritual Pueblo Ceramics During the Late Prehistoric Period” by Susan G. Kenagy, p. 78-85.
“Form, Function and Interpretation of Mimbres Ceramic Hemispheric Vessels” by Barbara L. Moulard, p. 86-98.
“Meaning in Women's Arts in North America” by Marvin Cohodas and Barbara DeMott, p. 99-106.
“Native American Photography: Diversity and Achievement in the Southwest” by Erin Younger, p. 107-115.
“Notes” p. 117-128