var BLIP_SITE_URL = "http://blip.tv"; 
var OUTPUT_METHOD = "document_write";

if(typeof(Url) != 'function') {
	document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/url.js"><\/script>');
}

if(typeof(PokkariPlayer) != 'function') {
	document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/pokkariPlayer.js?ver=2009070701"><\/script>');
}

if(typeof(DetectFlashVer) != 'function') {
	document.write('<script type="text/javascript" src="http://blip.tv/scripts/AC_OETags.js"><\/script>');
}




function play_blip_movie_1505537() {
	try {
		if (typeof(PokkariPlayerOptions.showPlayerOptions) == "undefined") 
			PokkariPlayerOptions.showPlayerOptions = {};

		PokkariPlayerOptions.showPlayerOptions.playerUrl = "http://a.blip.tv/scripts/flash/showplayer.swf";

		var player = PokkariPlayer.GetInstanceByMimeType("video/x-flv");
		window.player_1505537 = player;

		player.setPrimaryMediaUrl("http://blip.tv/file/get/Joguldi-GovernmentSublime921.flv?source=3");
		player.setSiteUrl('http://blip.tv');
		player.setPermalinkUrl("http://blip.tv/file/view/1497930?source=3&file_type=flv");
		player.setUsersId('286254');
		player.setUsersLogin('joguldi');
		player.setPostsId(1505537);
		player.setGuid("3C490366-B92D-11DD-94D2-8B9AA781E1A5");
		player.setPlayerTarget(document.getElementById('blip_movie_content_1505537'));
		
		player.setAdvertisingType("");
		
		
		player.setWidth(640);
		player.setHeight(360);
		
		
		
		player.setAutoPlay(true);
		
		
		player.setThumbnail("http://a.images.blip.tv/Joguldi-GovernmentSublime774-585.jpg");
		
		player.setPostsTitle("Government Sublime: How the Infrastructure State changed our relationship to the natural environment, 1800-1830");
		player.setDescription("<p>Jo&#39;s paper looks at the moment when large, centralized bureaucracies began to mediate everyday experiences of the natural landscape.  Looking at early tourist visits to the Menai Straits Bridge, among the first modern engineering projects to attract large numbers of visitors to an entirely natural setting, she argues that states immediately transformed channeled public appreciation of nature to a reliance on large, centralized government, with ultimately catastrophic results for decentralized information, local political power, and the fate of the environment.  <br /><br />This paper was originally presented at the American Society for Environmental History, Boise, Idaho, March 2008.</p><p>The video is presented as part of the Landscape Studies Podcast, http://landscapestudies.blogspot.com/</p>");
		player.setTopics("environmental history,landscape studies,environmentalism,green,big government,centralization,menai straits,thomas telford,civil engineering,history,british history,tourism");
		player.setContentRating("TV-UN");
		
		
	player.render();
	} catch(e) {
		// no pp
        	
	}
}


