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2. Penning the stakes: paper and the post/colonial music archive in Shanghai and Hong Kong.
- Author
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Liao, Yvonne
- Subjects
- *
MUSIC , *TWENTIETH century , *IMPERIALISM , *POSTCOLONIAL analysis - Abstract
The not-so-bygone worlds of music and colonialism in the twentieth century have yielded a wealth of scholarly 'paper knowledge' in the twenty-first of which to build off new archival-musicological work. This article takes a particular archiving direction by turning to paper itself – and pivots the postcolonial pen around the texts and textures of re-engaging colonial history in postcolonial music scholarship. I explore these writing stakes through my adopted narrative of 'the post/colonial music archive', as shaped by paper and paper's sounding elements of tone and voice. Crisscrossing between the colonial moment and the postcolonial pen, I straddle this developing narrative of the archive, and the registers and inflections of extant source narration for what they can jointly vocalize about the music making of the Municipal Brass Band in 1930s treaty port Shanghai, and the Sino-British Club in postwar colonial Hong Kong – two ostensible musical worlds of 'Britain in China' in the twentieth century, here thrown into disarray by the post/colonial archive's own inchoate, counter-tales. Ultimately, in this process, postcolonial music scholarship gains further traction and meaning as a multi-articulating inquiry – and a turn of mind that does not let colonial history and its persistent challenges for writing go askew. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. Invenzioni cartotecniche nella tradizione rinascimentale degli studi di anatomia.
- Author
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Giacomelli, Michela
- Subjects
- *
ORGANS (Anatomy) , *HUMAN body , *TWENTIETH century , *PAPERMAKING , *ANATOMY , *SOCIAL innovation - Abstract
This paper focuses on the papermaking inventions that, beginning with the Flemish physician Andreas Vesalius' De humani corporis fabrica (1543), became part of anatomy books. In particular, flaps became the tactile and visual tool that allowed, by progressively lifting individual flaps of paper (lift the flap), to represent the layered arrangement of organs and apparatuses of the human body. These movable devices, along with others (e.g., volvelle) widely employed especially in astronomy texts, became the educational complements of the new science. The paper reconstructs, through some significant samples, the evolution of interactive anatomical books up to the threshold of the 20th century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
4. Academic writing and identity: evaluative discourse in academic papers across cohorts of 20th century linguists.
- Author
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Guerra Lyons, Jesús David and Concu, Valentina
- Subjects
ACADEMIC discourse ,TWENTIETH century ,LINGUISTS ,FUNCTIONAL discourse grammar ,ENGLISH language ,MODAL logic - Abstract
Using a cohort sequential quantitative design and evaluative features drawn from Systemic Functional Grammar, this study investigates diachronic variation in linguists' use of evaluation to perform scholarly identities in English academic writing. More specifically, it focuses on the use of statements, commands, modality, comment assessment, and positive and negative lexis, in early and late career papers from 30 linguists born between 1905 and 1960. These linguists were grouped into three cohorts based on year of birth and studied in terms of variation along developmental and cross-generational timescales. Within the developmental timescale, scholars were found to use more evaluation in early career writing than in late career writing. Cohort-specific developmental changes are identified in the frequency of modality and comment assessment. Developmental and cohort-specific trends are found to occur within the backdrop of an overall decrease in the use of evaluative language within the discipline. Results point to a complex diachronic model of academic identity enactment in writing, whereby evaluative features pattern in similar or different ways depending on the timescale considered. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
5. What Is the Most Important and Impactful Paper Related to Movement Disorder Therapy Published in the 20th Century?
- Subjects
- *
MOVEMENT disorders , *MOVEMENT therapy , *TWENTIETH century , *PARKINSON'S disease , *MEDICAL personnel , *NERVOUS system - Abstract
Cotzias had a hypothesis that PD is due to a loss of neuromelanin in the substantia nigra,38,39 and if this pigment can be increased, perhaps this would ameliorate the symptoms of PD. In Cotzias' 1967 DL-dopa paper,1 he cites Hornykiewicz's report of brain dopamine depletion and wonders if that finding is related to the loss of neuromelanin in PD. Without any hesitation, my vote for the most important and impactful paper related to the treatment of movement disorders and published in the 20th Century is the one by George C. Cotzias and his colleagues,1 reporting on the dramatic effectiveness of high dosage DL-dopa in treating Parkinson's disease (PD). Sano conceived of the idea of overcoming the dopamine deficiency by administering dopa to PD patients. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Covered with Writing...-- Products on a Paper Base From the Archaeological Research at the Former Gestapo Headquarters in Anstadt Avenue in Łódź.
- Author
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Majorek, Magdalena, Latocha, Sebastian, Podolska-Rutkowska, Irena, Olczyk, Anna, and Sidorczuk, Ida
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,ETHNOHISTORY ,BOOKBINDING ,PHOTOGRAPHY ,EXCAVATION - Abstract
Copyright of Acta Universitatis Lodziensis: Folia Archaeologica is the property of Wydawnictwo Uniwersytetu Lodzkiego and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
7. A Digital Study of the Morphological and Stability Issues of a Delicate Wax-based Artwork.
- Author
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Sakellariou, C., Makris, D., and Karampinis, L.
- Subjects
DIGITAL technology ,MATERIAL plasticity ,ELECTRONIC paper ,ETHICAL problems ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Xenophanes is a figurine made of a waxy mixture and grey plasticine, created by Yannis Pappas at the end of the twentieth century. During its short period of existence, the figurine presented severe plastic deformation, structural, and stability issues, with detached or missing elements. The artwork's earlier preserved states are documented by an archival photograph of 1994 and two casts dated to 2005. The physical treatment of its deformation is an irreversible intervention that may put the artwork in additional danger. The conservation of complex contemporary artworks comprises a challenging field of work, as the coexistence and aging of different and often pliable materials lead to multiple deformations. Their conservation treatments could be kept to a minimum for the preservation and understanding of the artworks, with the support of three-dimensional (3D) documentation and digital restoration. A digital restoration that simulates the physical treatment of an artwork aims to provide information that could assist with decisions made for its physical care by minimizing the risks. This paper examines the digital restoration of the small figurine Xenophanes following the steps of increased intervention of a probable physical treatment and how each step of this process may affect its stability. 3D documentation of the current condition of the artwork and its two casts was made utilizing optical laser scanning and structure from motion photogrammetry. The resulting 3D models facilitated the digital restoration of the artwork to its earlier states. The comparison and analysis of the 3D models and the digital restoration process provided information that could assist its physical treatment. The digital restoration of the complex plastic deformation of an artwork is a case that, to our knowledge, has not been addressed so far. The complexity of the progress, the ethical dilemmas that arise during the artwork's restoration, and the reflection on the restoration of a cultural artifact only in the digital environment encourage the rethinking of conservation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
8. Editorial.
- Author
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Hohkamp, Michaela
- Subjects
MANUFACTURING processes ,PAPER ,CORPORATE reorganizations ,PHOTOGRAPHS ,TWENTIETH century ,PAPER industry ,WOOD ,MANUFACTURING industries - Abstract
An introduction is presented in which editor discusses various articles within the issue on topics including use and procurement of paper in wartime; disappearance of paper using the example of restructuring and Reorganization of libraries and how photographs as with agency equipped medium.
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
9. Diálogos rioplatenses. Buenos Aires, Montevideo y la creación de una academia moderna a comienzos del siglo XX.
- Author
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Murace, Giulia
- Subjects
ART education ,PAPER arts ,ACADEMIA ,ART history ,COMMUNITIES ,PUBLIC institutions ,TWENTIETH century ,ANALOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Arte, Individuo y Sociedad is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
10. Ciudades de papel. Aproximaciones gráficas al planeamiento utópico.
- Author
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Salgado, M. Asunción, Raposo, Javier F., and Butragueño, Belén
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,CARTOGRAPHY ,ARCHITECTS ,INTENTION ,UTOPIAS - Abstract
Copyright of Arte, Individuo y Sociedad is the property of Universidad Complutense de Madrid and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
11. Measuring the Partisan Behavior of U.S. Newspapers, 1880 to 1980.
- Author
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Hirano, Shigeo and Snyder Jr., James M.
- Subjects
PARTISANSHIP ,NEWSPAPERS ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
In this paper, we study newspaper partisan behavior and content, which we measure using coverage of and commentary on partisan activities, institutions, and actors. We use this measure to describe the levels of relative partisan behavior during the period 1880 to 1900, and to describe changes over the period 1880 to 1980. We find that, on average, newspapers were initially highly partisan, but gradually became less partisan over time. Importantly, we find as much change after the 1910s as before, which contributes to the existing literature that focuses on changes in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. We also investigate words and phrases that had negative or positive partisan connotations in particular periods. Finally, we examine whether some of the common hypotheses offered in the literature can account for the changes. The initial findings suggest that these explanations can only account for part of the decline. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Corporate Social Responsibility in Canadian Family Businesses: A Socioemotional Wealth Perspective.
- Author
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Latrous, Imen, Kchaou, Jihene, Ertz, Myriam, and Mnif, Yosra
- Subjects
PUBLIC companies ,TWENTIETH century ,FAMILY-owned business enterprises ,SOCIAL responsibility of business ,CLASSIFICATION ,FAMILIES - Abstract
After having gained prominence in the late 20th century, corporate social responsibility (CSR) has emerged as a critical business aspect, adopted widely across the corporate landscape. Although family firms play a significant global role, research on their relationship with CSR performance remains sparse and inconclusive. This paper seeks to bridge this gap by employing the primary classification of family firms, the socioemotional wealth perspective, and its FIBER model to examine their influence on CSR performance. The focus is on Canadian public companies listed on the S&P/TSX Composite Index from 2014 to 2022. Utilizing the NBC Canadian Family Index, the findings suggest that family firms exhibit superior CSR performance compared to their non-family counterparts. Further analyses indicate that family firms with greater control and influence by family members, those named after the family, those with strong emotional ties, and first-generation family firms tend to have enhanced CSR performance. By developing a socioemotional wealth score through FIBER dimensions to classify family firms, this study underscores the association of family firms with higher CSR performance, validating the robustness of the results. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
13. 2020 Best Paper Award Accounting Historians Journal.
- Subjects
ACCOUNT books ,ACCOUNTING teachers ,ACCOUNTING education ,COLLEGE teachers ,TWENTIETH century ,ACCOUNTANTS - Abstract
This paper explores how the formation of the American Association of University Instructors in Accounting ("AAUIA", the predecessor of the American Accounting Association) and its efforts towards achieving its original objectives provided initial solutions to a variety of interrelated problems facing both the accounting profession and accounting educators. In the early twentieth century, the accounting profession saw an increase in demand for accountants trained in attest, tax, and advisory services, but the accounting educators were unable to meet this demand because the accounting curricula that existed at the time suffered from multiple problems. Our paper examines the "Papers and Proceedings" of the first five annual meetings of the AAUIA to gain insights about how the formation of the AAUIA contributed to early developments in accounting education. These developments would allow the educators to better train accountants, which in turn would help advance the accounting profession. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
14. Arise, African! Roar, China!: Black Chinese Citizens of the World in the Twentieth Century: Gao Yunxiang, Chapel Hill: The University of North Carolina Press, 2021. 408 pp. $39.95 (Paper), ISBN: 9781469664606. $29.99 (Ebook), ISBN: 9781469664613.
- Author
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Kong, Xuening
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,ELECTRONIC books ,TWENTIETH century ,NATIONAL character - Abstract
Gao elaborates how Si-lan engaged in code-switching of her racial consciousness and identity depending upon changes in the international and domestic politics in China and in the United States. She explains how the PRC regime perceived, made, and remade the five cultural figures and underlines how Liu and Chen subtly adjusted their identities depending upon political dynamics and tensions. In chapter 3, Gao sheds light on Liu Liangmo, who popularized and translated Chinese militarist and folk music in cooperation with Paul Robeson and bound Christianity to the Communist China after 1949. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
15. Standing on the Shoulders of Giants: The Most Relevant Papers in Movement Disorders Field from the Second Half of the 20th Century.
- Author
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Merello, Marcelo and Bhatia, Kailash P.
- Subjects
- *
MOVEMENT disorders , *TWENTIETH century , *PARKINSON'S disease - Abstract
Standing on the shoulders of giants is a metaphor that means "using the revelations and discoveries made by major thinkers who went before to advance scientific progress." There have been several seminal papers considered to be the major break-through in the field that translated to a better knowledge of movement disorder pathophysiology, more efficient treatments, and important advances in the patient's quality of life. [Extracted from the article]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
16. Visions of vectors: sense, race, and colonialism in machine learning practice.
- Author
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Martinez, Jolen
- Subjects
MACHINE learning ,IMPERIALISM ,MACHINE design ,SENSES ,TWENTIETH century ,CYBERTERRORISM - Abstract
This paper interrogates the informational practices shared between human and computer machine learners as they train to sense the world through lines of order, or vectors. The paper does this by exploring the affective conditions through which vectors draw relations of data over a persistent, colonial image of race. Through analysis of pedagogical practices at the Summer Institute for Computational Social Science in Chicago, and a corresponding year-long machine learning design group, this paper examines how contemporary machine learning practitioners train themselves to sense calculative relationality on the basis of racialized difference. The paper compares this vectorized sensibility with 20th century enumerative practices in the United States by analyzing the racial statistics of W.E.B. Du Bois, Kelly Miller, and Frances Kellor to trace out affective histories of the vector. Ultimately, this paper asks how machine learners – whether algorithms or their human users – often project lines of colonial order upon other forms of life, and how, by questioning the claim of vector relations and their informational objects, we can confront this sense-training and reimagine ourselves. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
17. Satyagraha After Cancel Gandhi: Race and Caste through Labor and Architecture, C. 1896-1942.
- Author
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Maddipati, Venugopal
- Subjects
CASTE ,RACE relations ,SOCIAL marginality ,SOCIAL reproduction ,TWENTIETH century ,RACISM - Abstract
In the early twentieth century M.K. Gandhi articulated Satyagraha as a decentering quest for truth through everyday politics. Satyagraha privileged the "minor" or the marginalized over the dominant and everydayness and dwelling over history. In light of the contemporary criticisms of Gandhi, this paper examines Gandhian Satyagraha as a minor force that may hold him accountable for his entrenchment within dominant race and caste relations. The paper is divided into three sections devoted to "minor" matters of dwelling and ordinariness. I begin with an examination of Gandhi's politics through race and labor in South Africa, between 1896 and 1905. To understand Gandhi's racism in South Africa it is necessary to pay attention to his marginalization of social and legal narratives related to labor, agriculture, rent and places of habitation such as the hut. I then foreground Gandhi's marginalization of architecture in his discourses around Akash (the sky) and his body in 1932 and in 1942 during his incarcerations in Pune. Finally, I focus on the architecture of the huts built for him in Wardha in 1936–37 and the conflict that emerges between his conception of the social reproduction of labor as a minor voice within the self and his embrace of caste through varnashramadharma. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
18. Environmental Movements Linked Across the Iron Curtain in the 1980s: Hungary, Austria, and the Danube.
- Author
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SIMONKAY, MÁRTON
- Subjects
ENVIRONMENTALISM ,HYDROELECTRIC power plants ,REGIME change ,WESTERN countries ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
In the 1980s, the environmental movements that gained strength in the countries of the Western Bloc in the second half of the 20th century built connections with the environmentalists of the Eastern Bloc. Such a connection point was the protest against the construction of the planned hydroelectric power plants on the Danube in Hainburg in Austria, Gabcikovo in Czechoslovakia, and Nagymaros in Hungary. The paper examines mainly the Hungarian-Austrian relations: while the demonstrations on the eastern side of the Iron Curtain contributed to the regime changes in 1989, the Austrian side became financially interested in the construction of hydroelectric power plants in Hungary. The paper examines the environmental movements' pre-history, connection, and survival after the system changes, emphasizing both the development of cross-border relations and of the civil movements, with regard to the governments and the INGOs. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
19. ARTHUR ANTHONY PAGE: AT THE FOREFRONT OF QUEENSLAND ASTRONOMY DURING THE SECOND HALF OF THE TWENTIETH CENTURY.
- Author
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Anderson, Peter and Orchiston, Wayne
- Subjects
ACHIEVEMENT ,TWENTIETH century ,CATACLYSMIC variable stars ,ASTRONOMY ,STARS ,STAR maps (Astronomy) - Abstract
Arthur Anthony Page was at the forefront of astronomy in Queensland, Australia, for much of the second half of the twentieth century. This paper explores his life and achievements. He was a talented amateur astronomer who played a key role in the evolution of astronomical societies in the southeastern corner of the State of Queensland. He also was interested in research, especially in flare stars and cataclysmic variables, and built and equipped two observatories so that he could carry out these studies. He had access to some advanced instrumentation, and was keen to adopt new technologies such as photoelectric photometry--which was very unusual for amateur astronomers at this time. One of his discoveries was the chance flaring of the Be star 66 Ophiuchi in 1969. This was significant as this type of star had not previously been known to generate flares. Arthur Page also attended national and international conferences, published research papers in national and international journals, and produced star catalogues and star charts. Over the years, he built an international reputation in the shadowy boundary between professional and amateur astronomy. A long-time Internatonal Astronomical Union (IAU) member, he was an inaugural member of the Astronomical Society of Australia (a rare honour for an amateur astronomer), and was awarded an honorary PhD by the University of Queensland. In 2008 the IAU named asteroid 11516 'Arthur Page' in his honour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. AN AESTHETIC INVESTIGATION OF MODERN LANDSCAPE DESIGN IN LIGHT OF POSTMODERNISM: POP DOCTRINE.
- Author
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Qing Shen and WeiLiang Wang
- Subjects
LANDSCAPE design ,POP art ,ARTISTIC style ,LANDSCAPES in art ,TWENTIETH century ,AESTHETICS - Abstract
Copyright of Trans/Form/Ação is the property of Trans/Form/Acao and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. Medzi totožným a rôznorodým v súčasnom literárnovednom výskume.
- Author
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Taranenková, Ivana
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,HOMOGENEITY ,CULTURAL centers ,SKEPTICISM ,CULTURE - Abstract
Copyright of Slovenská Literatúra: Revue Pre Literárnu Vedu is the property of Institute of Slovak Literature and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Academician N.S. Kurnakov and His Contribution to the Formation of the Russian Industry in the late XIX -- early XX centuries.
- Author
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Podolskiy, Sergey I.
- Subjects
SOCIAL networks ,WORLD War I ,SOCIAL scientists ,TWENTIETH century ,COLLEGE teachers - Abstract
Copyright of Bylye Gody is the property of Cherkas Global University Press and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. It's only a mirage: Tahar Djaout's critique of logocentrism in L'Invention du désert.
- Author
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Aoudjit, Abdelkader
- Subjects
HISTORY of archives ,RELIGIOUS fundamentalism ,NATIONAL character ,HISTORIOGRAPHY ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Set in Algeria, France, and the Arabian Peninsula in the early twelfth and the late twentieth centuries, L'Invention du désert is about an author who reexamines his life and his craft while writing a history of the Almoravid dynasty that ruled Andalusia and a large portion of the Maghreb from 1056 to 1152 CE. Accordingly, the novel is made of two basic narrative strands. The first focuses on the private musings and reminiscences of the narrator, moving forwards and backwards in space and time and going all the way to his childhood. The second narrative strand recounts the life, rise to power, and downfall of Mohamed ibn Toumert, the religious scholar and zealot whose followers brought down the Almoravids and founded the Almohad dynasty that lasted from 1152 to 1269 CE. The two major story-lines that constitute the novel are brought together by the narrator's reflection on history and archiving for the purpose of problematizing the way Algerian history is conceived and used to address two major social and political concerns confronting Algerians: religious fundamentalism and national identity. The purpose of this article is to examine how Djaout uses the desert both as a topography and a metaphor to challenge the logocentrism of religious fundamentalism and narrow and essentialist definitions of Algerianess. The paper at the same time shows how the understanding and critique of historical logocentrism that are advanced in L'Invention du désert parallel Jacques Derrida's philosophy put forward in Of Grammatology (Derrida in Of grammatology, Johns Hopkins University Press, Baltimore, 1976) and other early works. Because the manuscripts, critical of Islam as practiced under Almoravid rule, Ibn Toumert carries with him function as archives, the paper also engages with some of the themes Derrida developed later in Archive Fever: A Freudian Impression (Derrida in Archive fever: a Freudian impression, University of Chicago Press, Chicago, 1996). [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
24. Dynamic Characteristics of a 1950s Heritage Building: A Comparison of Original Design Methods and Modern Techniques.
- Author
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Peña, Fernando and Ramos, Joel
- Subjects
VIBRATION tests ,EARTHQUAKE resistant design ,DYNAMIC testing ,TWENTIETH century ,TALL buildings - Abstract
Research on design rules and methods for architectural heritage is an important aspect of conservation practice. Nevertheless, efforts to recover and divulge design methods for Modern Heritage remain limited. This paper is related to the recent structural assessment of a 15-storey heritage building built in 1950, during which a document describing the original seismic analysis of this structure was identified. The methodology employed is of particular interest, as it involves the application of pioneer concepts of dynamic analysis in the design of the first tall buildings in Mexico. The primary aim of this paper is to review the seismic design criteria for the case under study in order to contribute to the state of the art in Modern Heritage. The review includes a comparison between the dynamic characteristics estimated during the design and the results of recent ambient vibration tests and numerical modeling. Several sources of error among the design criteria were identified. Notably, the fundamental period estimated during the design was 38% larger than the experimental value due to an underestimation in stiffness, which introduces significant uncertainty into the design. Overall, the review shows the evolution of seismic analysis over time and provide valuable insights for the study of similar buildings. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
25. VALERŠTAJNOVA TEORIJA SVETSKOG SISTEMA: PERSPEKTIVA EKONOMSKE ISTORIJE ILI POGLED U BUDUĆNOST?
- Author
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PRAŠČEVIĆ, ALEKSANDRA
- Subjects
WORLD system theory ,ECONOMIC development ,ECONOMIC history ,TWENTIETH century ,INDUSTRIALIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Ekonomske Ideje i Praksa is the property of Centar za Izdavacku Delatnost Ekonomskog Fakulteta u Beogradu and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
26. The contributions of historical geography research in the twentieth century to the concept of "Chinese nation".
- Author
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Shi, Shuo
- Subjects
CHINESE people ,TWENTIETH century ,DISCOURSE analysis ,GEOGRAPHY ,HISTORICAL geography ,SCHOLARS - Abstract
The Chinese nation has evolved through history and is inextricably linked with geographical factors. Since the inception of the concept of "Chinese nation" in the twentieth century, Chinese scholars have made significant contributions to understanding this concept from a historical geography perspective. This paper undertakes an examination and discussion of these contributions, highlighting three main aspects in which Chinese scholars in the twentieth century have significantly enhanced the concept of "Chinese nation" from a historical geography perspective: firstly, escaping the trap of "China Proper" and comprehensively understanding the Chinese nation from a geographical perspective; secondly, breaking the spatial barrier set up by the Great Wall, endowing the Chinese nation with a complete geographical space; thirdly, The Historical Atlas of China clarifying the connection between historical China and modern China, providing a comprehensive geographical basis for understanding the formation and development of the Chinese nation. The paper, contextualized within the historical backdrop, provides an analysis and discourse on these three aspects, indicating that the contributions of scholars in the twentieth century were instrumental in refining the concept of the Chinese nation from a historical geography perspective, illustrating the inseparable connection between nation and geography. Only through the organic integration of history, nation, and geography can we fully grasp the historical trajectory and geographical foundation of the Chinese nation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
27. The Beginning of the Poem: The Epigraph.
- Author
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Van, Lucy
- Subjects
LOVE songs ,TWENTY-first century ,TWENTIETH century ,POETRY (Literary form) ,INTENTION - Abstract
Theoretically, a poem can begin in any way. What does it mean that in practice, poems often begin in a particular way—that is, by returning to a fragment of some prior thing? We see this in the encore of John Milton's opening to Lycidas ('Yet once more, O ye laurels, and once more'); differently, we see this in the widely used convention of the poetic epigraph (for instance, T. S. Eliot's 'The Love Song of J. Alfred Prufrock' begins with six lines from Dante's Inferno). While there is an established model for understanding the beginning as an act that invokes poetic precedent, this paper seeks to expose the beginning's logic of return to a broader sense of language that is beyond the remit of poetic tradition as such. With a focus on the epigraph, this paper thinks about the everyday existence of poems and about how this existence relates to ordinary language, asking, how do these different modes of language function together? How does ordinary language collude in the creation of poetry? In its enactment of the passage of language from one mode of existence to another, the beginning of a poem might offer some answers to these questions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
28. Landscapes of Hope: Anachronic Histories of a Single Urban Block in Milwaukee, Wisconsin.
- Author
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Sen, Arijit
- Subjects
URBAN history ,NOSTALGIA ,BLACK people ,TWENTIETH century ,LANDSCAPES ,AFRICAN Americans - Abstract
Historians have examined vernacular duplex homes in Milwaukee's north side neighborhoods to write the history of the white working-class immigrants who settled this industrial metropolis during the early years of the twentieth century. African Americans moved into these neighborhoods in the later decades of the twentieth century. This paper explores how current Black residents construe the history of their neighborhood. To examine what such a historical narrative might look like, this paper presents three stories from a single city block: a twentieth century narrative of growth, a more recent story of decline, and a longer aspirational dream of a shared commons. Grounded in the material world that they observe around them, the current inhabitants assemble these diverse memories in anachronic ways, around multiple experiences of time such as nostalgia, a sense of disenfranchisement in the present moment, and an aspirational dream of a yet unrealized future. This ability to craft a complex narrative of place in a precarious world has emerged as a form of collective resistance against realities of racism, segregation, and urban disinvestment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
29. A dialog between Sino-Western legal traditions: Yan Fu's translation of "natural law" in Montesquieu's The Spirit of Laws.
- Author
-
Zhuang, Chiyuan
- Subjects
NATURAL law ,CULTURAL relations ,TWENTIETH century ,TRANSLATORS ,TRANSLATING & interpreting - Abstract
As an integral component of legal culture, legal concepts possess distinct cultural characteristics. Translating legal concepts between different cultures to facilitate effective cultural exchange and mutual understanding poses a significant challenge for legal translators. This paper examines Yan Fu's Chinese translation of "natural law", a key concept in Montesquieu's classic The Spirit of Laws, as a case study to analyze the connection between legal translation and cultural traditions in the socio-historical contexts of the early 20th century China. By analyzing Yan's choice of words, the paper unveils how Yan Fu reinterpreted Western natural law from both religious and ethical perspectives, thereby creating a dynamic dialog between Sino-Western legal cultural traditions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. Introduction: The Waste of Conflict. The Conflicts of Waste.
- Author
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Borowy, Iris, Pal, Viktor, and Zimring, Carl
- Subjects
URBANIZATION ,TWENTIETH century ,EXPLOSIVE volcanic eruptions - Abstract
Throughout human history, people have always produced waste, but during the last century, this has shown explosive growth. Globally, a combination of rising incomes, urbanization, the development of new, cheap materials, and changing lifestyles have driven the growth of products that were designed to be used for only limited periods of time producing a totally unprecedented amount and variety of waste. However, this development has not affected all people in similar ways. Waste has been a marker of unprecedented but unbalanced efficiency, wealth and power, and conflict. Five articles address waste as a function of conflicts in areas in various places in Europe and Asia. Collectively, these papers shed an unusual light on the twentieth century world through a collection of cases, in which conflicts have tended to exacerbate challenges of waste, either by increasing the quantity of weapons and their (often toxic) remains, or by creating contexts in which the confrontation with adversaries often relegated environmental, social and health-related consideration to the backstage. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. From philanthropy to business: the economics of Royal Society journal publishing in the twentieth century.
- Author
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Fyfe, Aileen
- Subjects
TWENTIETH century ,PERIODICAL publishing ,MANAGERIAL economics ,ECONOMIC development ,TWENTY-first century ,ELECTRONIC journals - Abstract
Scientific journal publishing has become a lucrative enterprise, for commercial firms and (some) society publishers alike; but it was not always thus. The Royal Society is the publisher of the world's longest-running scientific journal, and for most of the history of the Philosophical Transactions, its publication was a severe drain on the Society's finances. This paper uses the rich archives of the Royal Society to investigate the economic transformation of journal publishing over the course of the twentieth century. It began the century as a scholarly mission activity heavily subsidized by the Society, but ended it as a valuable income stream. Never-before-seen data reveal three phases: the end of the philanthropic model of circulation; the transition to a sales-based commercial model amidst the post-war boom in subscriber numbers; and the challenges facing that new business model once subscriber numbers went into decline in the late twentieth century. The paper does not directly address the open access movement of the twenty-first century, but is essential reading to understand the financial background. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Living Under Aboriginal Exemption: Negotiating State Governments' Policies and Practices.
- Author
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Wickes, Judi, Robinson, Kella, and Aberdeen, Lucinda
- Subjects
STATE governments ,GOVERNMENT policy ,INDIGENOUS Australians ,TWENTIETH century ,OLDER people - Abstract
This volume of the Australian Journal of Politics and History presents an edited collection of papers delivered by emerging and established researchers at the Second Rethinking & Researching 20th Century Aboriginal Exemption Symposium, co‐hosted by the University of the Sunshine Coast with La Trobe University in October 2021. The papers reveal the human costs, hardships and legacies of the state policies of Aboriginal Exemption last century which supposedly offered the promise of freedom to Indigenous Australians confined to reserves and missions. Equally, the papers explore innovative and culturally safe ways to investigate and further understand Aboriginal exemption that ensure Ancestors and Elders, who actively negotiated, resisted and subverted its use, are recognised and honoured. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
33. Zapisane… – wyroby na podłożu papierowym pochodzące z badań archeologicznych dawnej siedziby Gestapo przy al. Anstadta w Łodzi
- Author
-
Magdalena Majorek, Sebastian Latocha, Irena Podolska-Rutkowska, Anna Olczyk, Ida Sidorczuk, Majorek, Magdalena - University of Lodz, Institute of Archaeology, Laboratory of Dating and Conservation of Artifacts, Latocha, Sebastian - University of Lodz, Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology, Podolska-Rutkowska, Irena - Univeristy of Lodz, Doctoral School of Humanities, Olczyk, Anna - Museum of Archaeology and Ethnography in Łódź, Sidorczuk, Ida - University of Lodz, Institute of Archaeology, Majorek, Magdalena - magdalena.majorek@uni.lodz.pl, Latocha, Sebastian - sebastian.latocha@uni.lodz.pl, Podolska-Rutkowska, Irena - irena.podolska.rutkowska@edu.uni.lodz.pl, Olczyk, Anna - anna.olczyk@maie.lodz.pl, and Sidorczuk, Ida - idasidorczuk@interia.pl
- Subjects
XX w ,paper products ,bookbinding ,wyroby papierowe ,twentieth century ,archaeology ,introligatorstwo ,dawna siedziba Gestapo ,General Earth and Planetary Sciences ,archeologia ,antropologia historyczna ,former Gestapo headquarters ,historical anthropology ,General Environmental Science - Abstract
During the archaeological research conducted in 2019 under the project “The Former Headquarters of the Gestapo and the Communist Provincial Office of Public Security in Anstadt Avenue in Łódź. Interdisciplinary Site Research” under the supervision of Dr Olgierd Ławrynowicz, an object filled with products on a paper base and bookbinding materials was found in one of the excavations. This paper attempts to clarify the chronology of paper products and to identify their type (typescripts, prints of monetary value, books, bookbinding materials, arrangement drawings, other paper products) and the material used. The visible content was identified using basic research methods and digital photographic documentation of it was made to preserve it. Podczas badań archeologicznych prowadzonych w 2019 r. w ramach projektu „Dawna siedziba Gestapo i Wojewódzkiego Urzędu Bezpieczeństwa Publicznego przy al. Anstadta w Łodzi. Interdyscyplinarne badania miejsca” pod kierunkiem dra Olgierda Ławrynowicza w jednym z wykopów odnaleziono obiekt wypełniony wyrobami na podłożu papierowym oraz materiałami introligatorskimi. W artykule podjęto próbę doprecyzowania chronologii wyrobów papierowych, rozpoznania ich rodzaju (maszynopis, druk wartościowy, książka, materiał introligatorski, rysunek techniczny, inne wyroby papierowe) i użytego surowca. Wykonano identyfikację odsłoniętych treści przy użyciu podstawowych metod badawczych oraz ich cyfrową dokumentację fotograficzną w ramach działań ochronnych.
- Published
- 2022
34. Re-Visioning Gendered Fairy Tales: An Overview.
- Author
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Ranade, Shanice Anne and Raj, Sushma
- Subjects
FAIRY tales ,GENDER ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Fairy tales, despite having occupied an important place in one's childhood, were not given their due importance in the literary world until recently. The dangers in the ideologies propagated through the traditional fairy tales, especially concerning women, were not realized or acknowledged on account of various reasons, which form the basis of the analysis in this paper. The paper also gives an overview of the changes the literary fairy tale has gone through right up to the twentieth century, with a focus on the re-visioned tales that exude feminist empowerment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
35. Inertial Propulsion Devices: A Review.
- Author
-
Provatidis, Christopher G.
- Subjects
OLYMPIC Games ,OLYMPIC athletes ,TWENTIETH century ,PATENTS ,MOTION capture (Human mechanics) - Abstract
Google Scholar produces about 278 hits for the term "inertial propulsion". If patents are also included, the number of hits increases to 536. This paper discusses, in a critical way, some characteristic aspects of this controversial topic. The review starts with the halteres of athletes in the Olympic games of ancient times and then continues with some typical devices which have been developed and/or patented from the second quarter of the twentieth century to the present day. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. GLOBAL THREADS, UNVEILING UNEVENNESS: CONTEMPORARY MAXIMALIST PROJECTS INTERROGATING CULTURAL HYBRIDISATION AND MARGINALITY.
- Author
-
VĂSIEȘ, Alex
- Subjects
LITERARY form ,TWENTIETH century ,STORYTELLING - Abstract
Copyright of Studia Universitatis Babes-Bolyai, Philologia is the property of Babes-Bolyai University, Cluj-Napoca, Romania and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. Birds and People: A Symbiotic Relationship in Practice.
- Author
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Butler, Richard William
- Subjects
BIRD populations ,BIRD conservation ,CITIZENS ,MIGRATORY birds ,TWENTIETH century ,ORNITHOLOGISTS - Abstract
Simple Summary: The paper discusses the changing relationships between the human and avian populations on a small Scottish island, Fair Isle, following the establishment of a bird observatory on the island in 1948. The opening of the first observatory saw a significant increase in the number of birdwatchers visiting the island and interacting with the small resident population (50 people) and with the resident and migratory avian populations. Over the period since 1948, several versions of the Observatory have provided economic viability that has stabilised and increased the permanent human population and resulted in a positive relationship between both avian and human populations on the island. Part of the island has been made a Site of Special Scientific Interest, agricultural practices have been modified to accommodate resident and migratory birds, the Observatories have engaged in scientific research, and services for residents and visitors on the island have been greatly improved. The relationship between the human and avian populations can accurately be described as symbiotic because all populations have benefitted from the changes over the past six decades. This Special Issue of Birds is focused on a number of ways in which people and birds interact with nature, and the example discussed here incorporates four of the seven relationships noted. These are: how birds and birding connect people with nature, the role of communities in the study and conservation of birds, the involvement of people with professional ornithologists, and citizens' perception and knowledge of birds. The island of Fair Isle provides the location for the examination of these relationships, illustrating the positive interaction between the two human populations of the island and the two avian populations. It is based on fieldwork and literature studies conducted at intervals over a sixty-year period and a review of written and photographic evidence dating back to the beginning of the twentieth century. The purpose of the paper therefore, is to discuss how the relationships between the human and avian populations of the island have changed over time to a more positive and mutually dependent relationship, which is somewhat unique and can be described as symbiotic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Technical study on the early twentieth century's embroidered women waistcoat in Gyalrong Tibetan area in Sichuan, China.
- Author
-
Wang, Yue, Zhan, Lidan, Zhou, Yihang, Liu, Jian, and Wu, Xiaohong
- Subjects
EMBROIDERY ,TWENTIETH century ,VESTS ,LIQUID chromatography-mass spectrometry ,TIBETANS ,SCANNING electron microscopes - Abstract
In the early twentieth century, traditional handicraft was challenged by the latest technology in China. It is reflected by ethnic costumes combining new and old, as in the waistcoat of this study. This waistcoat made at Gyalrong Tibetan area in Sichuan, China, displays unique local features in terms of its brilliant colors and comprehensive craftsmanship. This study employs techniques such as optical microscopy, infrared spectroscopy, scanning electron microscope and high performance liquid chromatography-mass spectrometry to investigate various aspects of this waistcoat, including its fabrics and dyes. The results showed that the waistcoat was primarily made of cotton and silk, with a bamboo paper layer, and that silk as well as twisted gold and silver threads were employed for the embroidery. Various embroidery techniques were applied, with patterns, color combinations, and characteristics being consistent with those of Tibetan and Shu (蜀) embroidery. In terms of dyeing technology, a wide range of colors were achieved through multi-step dyeing processes using natural dye stuffs like pagoda bud, and synthetic dyes like magenta. These findings indicates that modern technologies were well integrated into traditional garment manufacture in the early twentieth century in China. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. The spectrum of semantic and syntactic labour.
- Author
-
Warner, Julian
- Subjects
SOCIAL impact ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Purpose: The article extends the distinction of semantic from syntactic labour to comprehend all forms of mental labour. It answers a critique from de Fremery and Buckland, which required envisaging mental labour as a differentiated spectrum. Design/methodology/approach: The paper adopts a discursive approach. It first reviews the significance and extensive diffusion of the distinction of semantic from syntactic labour. Second, it integrates semantic and syntactic labour along a vertical dimension within mental labour, indicating analogies in principle with, and differences in application from, the inherited distinction of intellectual from clerical labour. Third, it develops semantic labour to the very highest level, on a consistent principle of differentiation from syntactic labour. Finally, it reintegrates the understanding developed of semantic labour with syntactic labour, confirming that they can fully and informatively occupy mental labour. Findings: The article further validates the distinction of semantic from syntactic labour. It enables to address Norbert Wiener's classic challenge of appropriately distributing activity between human and computer. Research limitations/implications: The article transforms work in progress into knowledge for diffusion. Practical implications: It has practical implications for determining what tasks to delegate to computational technology. Social implications: The paper has social implications for the understanding of appropriate human and machine computational tasks and our own distinctive humanness. Originality/value: The paper is highly original. Although based on preceding research, from the late 20th century, it is the first separately published full account of semantic and syntactic labour. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Controlling Reproduction and Disrupting Family Formation: California Women's Prisons and the Violent Legacy of Eugenics.
- Author
-
Avila, Vrindavani and James, Jennifer Elyse
- Subjects
EUGENICS ,PREDICATE (Logic) ,PRISONS ,REPRODUCTIVE rights ,PRISON population ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Prisons in the United States serve as a site and embodiment of gendered and racialized state violence. The US incarcerates more people than any other nation in both numbers and per capita rates. Individuals incarcerated in women's prisons are 10% of the total prison population, yet women's prisons remain understudied, and the violence that occurs in women's facilities is rampant, widespread, and operates in particular racialized and gendered ways. This paper centers the forced sterilizations that occurred in California state prisons over the last two decades. We consider how reproduction and the nuclear family have served as a primary site of racial capitalism and eugenic ideology. While eugenic policies were popularized and promoted across the US and globally in the 20th century, the violent ideas underlying eugenic ideology have been a constant presence throughout US history. The height of the eugenics era is marked by the forcible sterilization of institutionalized 'deviant' bodies. While discussions of eugenics often center these programs, the reach of eugenic policies extends far beyond surgical interventions. We utilize a reproductive justice lens to argue that the hierarchical, racialized social stratification necessary for the existence of prisons constructs and sustains the 'deviant' bodies and families that predicate eugenic logic, policies, and practices. In this conceptual paper, we draw from ongoing research to argue that prisons, as institutions and as a product of racial capitalism, perpetuate the ongoing violent legacy of eugenics and name abolition as a central component of the fight to end reproductive oppression. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. Friendship archaeology: how Maude Abbott occupied overlapping spaces of excellence.
- Author
-
Adams, Annmarie
- Subjects
CONGENITAL heart disease ,MEDICAL research personnel ,NOBEL Prize winners ,TWENTIETH century ,CHILDREN'S books ,FRIENDSHIP - Abstract
This paper is drawn from a chapter of a forthcoming book on Canadian physician Maude Abbott. The excerpt explores how a prominent woman negotiated relationships during the early twentieth century. Abbott spent most of her career at McGill University in Montreal, as curator of its medical museum and as a researcher in congenital heart disease. Nonetheless her network of correspondents was vast. Engaging an approach the author calls 'friendship archaeology', the paper excavates Abbott's relationship with two powerful American physicians, Emanuel Libman and Paul Dudley White. Archival evidence turns up links with Nobel Prize nominees and winners, revealing how Abbott manoeuvred in that network. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
42. La materialidad literaria como espacio desafiante de una «convivialidad» global -- Elena Poniatowska y Gabriel García Márquez.
- Author
-
Müller, Gesine
- Subjects
LATIN American literature ,INFLUENCE (Literary, artistic, etc.) ,LITERATURE ,TWENTIETH century ,GLOBALIZATION - Abstract
Copyright of Orbis Tertius is the property of Universidad Nacional de La Plata and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. "How didst thou come beneath the murky darkness?": sense-making in light of the ancient Greeks and in the spirit of Hegel.
- Author
-
Gross, Margaret
- Subjects
INFORMATION-seeking behavior ,PHILOSOPHY of science ,LIBRARY science ,GREEKS ,TWENTIETH century ,HEGELIANISM - Abstract
Purpose: This piece explores the philosophical origins of sense-making as defined in Brenda Dervin's methodology. Design/methodology/approach: This conceptual paper locates the origins of sense-making's rich ontological, epistemological and etymological heritage to the Classical Greece and the Pre-Socratic period. The Greek origins of sense-making's philosophical undercurrents surface again in Hegel's Phenomenology of Spirit before the idea is picked up again in twentieth century philosophy and library science. Findings: This is a conceptual paper and no empirical findings are presented. Originality/value: This paper makes an original contribution to the study of information seeking and to sense making theory and methodology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Accountingization, colonization and hybridization in historical perspective: the relationship between hospital accounting and clinical medicine in late 20th century Britain.
- Author
-
Gebreiter, Florian
- Subjects
ACCOUNTANTS ,GOVERNMENT accounting ,TWENTIETH century ,CLINICAL medicine ,GOVERNMENT report writing ,HOSPITALS ,HISTORY of accounting - Abstract
Purpose: This paper examines the historical background of accountingization, colonization and hybridization in the health services by exploring the relationship between hospital accounting and clinical medicine in Britain between the late 1960s and the early 2000s. Design/methodology/approach: The paper draws on an analysis of professional journals, government reports and other documentary sources relating to accounting and medical developments. It is informed by Abbott's sociology of professions and Eyal's sociology of expertise. Findings: The paper shows that not only accountants but also elements within the medical profession sought to make the practice of medicine more visible, calculable and standardized, and that accounting and medical attempts to make medicine calculable interacted in a mutually reinforcing manner. Consequently, it argues that a movement towards clinical forms of quantification within the medical profession made it more open to economic calculation, which underpinned hospital accounting reforms and the accountingization, colonization or hybridization of health services. Originality/value: The paper demonstrates that a fuller understanding of the relationship between accounting and public sector professions can be developed if we examine their mutual interactions rather than restricting ourselves to analyzing accounting's effects on public sector professions. The paper moreover illustrates instances of intraprofessional conflict and inter-professional cooperation, and draws on the sociology of expertise to suggests that while hospital accounting reforms have curbed the power of medical professionals, they have also enhanced the power of clinical expertise. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2022
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Samuelson's social welfare function and Buchanan's critique: the struggle with normative science.
- Author
-
Coker, David C. and Marciano, Alain
- Subjects
SOCIAL services ,SOCIAL skills ,PUBLIC finance ,PUBLIC history ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
A history of the transformation of public finance into public economics necessarily involves an understanding of the tension between positive and normative statements, that is a history of how public economists dealt with Robbins's requirements that economists should not make normative statements. In this paper, we propose to contribute to this history by discussing and comparing the works of two major economists of the 20th century, Paul Samuelson and James Buchanan. We show that they both use the same strategy to deal with the positive/normative tension: they adopt a reduced scale of analysis to escape normative judgements – the family for Samuelson and small groups (clubs) for Buchanan. What they do manage at this level is to create examples or models which remove that normative response from the theorist, and ascribe it to the participants. The normative views of the theorist are not involved. Yet, when one shifts back to a larger scale, the positive element of the analysis is less clear, at least in Samuelson's work. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. Transformations: the material representation of historical experiments in science teaching.
- Author
-
Heering, Peter
- Subjects
SCIENTIFIC experimentation ,NINETEENTH century ,HISTORY of physics ,TEACHING demonstrations ,EXPERIMENTAL methods in education ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Some experiments from the history of physics became so famous that they not only made it into the textbook canon but were transformed into lecture demonstration performances and student laboratory activities in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. While, at first glance, some of these demonstrations as well as the related instruments do resemble their historical ancestors, a closer examination reveals significant differences both in the instruments themselves and in the practices and meanings associated with them. In this paper, I analyse the relation between the research instruments and the respective teaching demonstrations. In doing so, I particularly distinguish between demonstrations that address the process of the actual experimental procedures, and those that focus on the outcome or results (the product) of the experiment. This distinction will be illustrated in some exemplary case studies from the late nineteenth century and the early twentieth in which both the historical experiment and the related educational devices are analysed. The tension between the historical experiment on the one hand, and the different variants of the teaching version on the other, result in the educational as well as epistemological problems that are discussed in this paper. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
47. Constructing Vision, Surface, and Form in Architecture.
- Author
-
Ostwald, Michael J.
- Subjects
GEOMETRICAL constructions ,GEOMETRIC modeling ,COMMERCIAL art ,TWENTIETH century ,MATHEMATICS - Abstract
This letter from the editor introduces Vol. 25(3) of the Nexus Network Journal: Architecture and Mathematics. The research in this issue addresses three interconnected themes, the first of which is the use of projective geometry to model vision or light. The second is about the geometric tiling and construction of surfaces and the final theme, which is also the most extensive, involves the geometric and parametric generation of architectural forms. The twelve research contributions in this issue examine architectural cases from the third century (BCE) to the twentieth century (CE) and building types from commercial and domestic designs to Christian and Islamic religious structures. The issue concludes with a conference report on Bridges Aalto 2022. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
48. The biography of the Lateran squeezes: The curation of archaeological knowledge through hands-on replication.
- Author
-
Van de Ven, Annelies
- Subjects
ARCHAEOLOGY ,BIOGRAPHY (Literary form) ,PRIMITIVE & early church, ca. 30-600 ,CULTURAL values ,MAP collections ,TWENTIETH century - Abstract
Replicas have the ability to communicate artistic, cultural and intellectual values outside their original context. They do this by physically establishing a canon for ordering and interpreting history. Epigraphical squeezes, as fragmentary impressions of sculpted or incised surfaces, are one example of such replicas, occupying a transitory space between source and copy. However, they are rarely studied within this framework, instead seen primarily as an aide for publication. To better understand how squeezes are implicated in our own processes of knowledge formation, this paper focuses on a single case study, the collection of early Christian squeezes held at Musée L. In mapping the biography of this collection, tracing its connection to the emergence of archaeology as a science based on interaction with material remains at the turn of the twentieth century, this case study will provide a rich model for how squeezes can act as sources for historiographical inquiry. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. A szóbeliségtől az írásbeliségig – és vissza? Jegyzetek Albert Wesselski korai munkássága kapcsán.
- Author
-
JÓZSEF, LISZKA
- Subjects
TRANSLATING & interpreting ,GENRE studies ,FAIRY tales ,COMPARATIVE method ,TWENTIETH century ,TRANSMISSION of sound - Abstract
This paper attempts to present the intellectual legacy of Albert Wesselski (Vienna, 1871–Prague, 1939), a partly forgotten great figure of literary and textual folkloristic comparatistics of the first half of the 20th century, and argues for his timeliness. While he also played an important role as a literary mediator and translator (e.g. translations and interpretations of Boccaccio and Dante, translations of medieval Italian, French and Flemish folklore texts), he was primarily concerned with questions of the origins of European and Asian fairy tales, the problem of the processes of transmission and genre theory. He presented the transnational and transcontinental connections between individual (fairy-tale) texts in his reflections, which were based on his exceptional erudition and knowledge of the material. His views on the essentially literary origins of fairytale material were disputed by many in his day, but at least some of them now seem to be confirmed. His comparative method can be an inspiration for those working with folklore and literary texts, both here and now. The present paper attempts to provide a sketchy overview of the early stages of Wesselski’s oeuvre and to inspire further reflection. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. 'I am almost the middle-class white man, aren't I?': elite women, education and occupational trajectories in late twentieth-century Britain.
- Author
-
Worth, Eve and Reeves, Aaron
- Subjects
ORAL history ,MIDDLE class ,WHITE men ,DIVISION of labor ,TWENTIETH century ,SCHOOLGIRLS ,OCCUPATIONAL prestige ,SEX discrimination - Abstract
This paper makes a major intervention in the historiography of elites through analysis of the experience of women occupational elites born in post-war Britain. The paper draws on a new set of oral history interviews recently conducted with women born in the post-war decades with an entry in Who's Who which is the leading biographical dictionary of 'noteworthy and influential' people in the UK. The women we interviewed were all highly occupationally successful and those analysed here also attended one of twelve elite girls' schools. This article argues that our interviewees can be separated into two distinct post-war cohorts: one born between early 1940s and mid-1950s and the other born late 1950s to late 1960s. The shape and structure of the cohort's trajectories were different, their relationship to their careers were different, and, even though both groups faced sexual discrimination and unequal divisions of labour, the nature of these gendered inequalities changed too. By foregrounding elite women within this shifting historical context, this article illuminates broader trends in both classed and gendered experience and how this related to the changing nature of the economy in recent history. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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